The Art of Queenship in the Hellenistic World
In The Art of Queenship in the Hellenistic World, Patricia Eunji Kim examines the visual and material cultures of Hellenistic queens, the royal and dynastic women who served as subjects and patrons of art. Exploring evidence in the interconnected eastern Mediterranean and western Asia from the fourth to second centuries BCE, Kim argues that the arts of queenship were central to expressions of dynastic (and sometimes even imperial) consolidation, continuity, and legitimacy. From gems, coins, and vessels to monuments and sculpture, the visual and material cultures of queenship appeared in a range of sacred settings, public spaces, royal courts, and domestic domains. Encompassing several dynasties, including the Hecatomnids, Argeads, Ptolemies, Seleucids, and Attalids, Kim inaugurates new methods for comparing and interpreting visual articulations of queenship and ideal femininity from distinct yet culturally entangled contexts, thus illuminating the ways that women had an impact art and politics in the ancient world.
- Analyzes diverse representational practices that were used to assert the presence of royal women
- Examines archaeological traces and art historical evidence that tell us stories about the physical movements and political mobilities of dynastic women throughout the Hellenistic period
- Offers a synthetic approach to the phenomenon of Hellenistic period queenship
Product details
No date availableHardback
9781009502122
350 pages
254 × 178 mm
Table of Contents
- Abbreviations and sources
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Engendering dynasty: monumental women and public sculpture
- 2. Foreign royal wives from Asia and objects of Hellenistic queenship
- 3. (Be)Holding the beautiful bodies of Ptolemaic queens
- 4. Imperial kinship and care in portrayals of Seleucid queenship
- 5. Royal mothers and Attalid dynastic monuments
- Conclusion: looking for queens
- Bibliography.