Selected Product: | Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100-450 (Oxford History of Art Series) Hardcover Author: Jas Elsner Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA Release Date: 1999-01-14 ISBN-10: 019284265X ISBN-13: 9780192842657 List Price: $39.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Roman Triumph ISBN-10: 0674026136 ISBN-13: 9780674026131 List Price:$29.95 Classical Art: From Greece to Rome (Oxford History of Art) ISBN-10: 0192842374 ISBN-13: 9780192842374 List Price:$27.95 Mosaics as History: The Near East from Late Antiquity to Islam (Revealing Antiquity) ISBN-10: 0674022920 ISBN-13: 9780674022928 List Price:$22.95 Early Christian & Byzantine Art: A&I (Art and Ideas) ISBN-10: 0714831689 ISBN-13: 9780714831688 List Price:$24.95 The Later Roman Empire: An Archaeology AD 150-600 ISBN-10: 0752442058 ISBN-13: 9780752442051 List Price:$34.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100-450 (Oxford History of Art Series) by Jas Elsner (ISBN-10: 019284265X, ISBN-13: 9780192842657). At this time we have not yet written a review for Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100-450 (Oxford History of Art Series) by Jas Elsner (ISBN-10: 019284265X, ISBN-13: 9780192842657). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This stimulating book offers an exciting new approach to the twin themes of the arts of the Roman Empire and the rise of Christian art. Beginning in the second century, with its rich revival of ancient learning and artistic practices, and ending in the fifth with Christian narrative and liturgical cycles and the pilgrimage arts, this book explores the art of the Roman Empire by tackling two inter-related periods of internal transformation: the 'Second Sophist' (c. ad 100-300), and the era of late antiquity (c. ad 250-450). For the first time, these two themes are treated together, throwing a more penetrating light on the radical change undergone by the empire in becoming a Christian imperium. Vases, murals, statues, and masonry are explored in relation to such issues as power, death, society, acculturation, and religion. By examining questions of reception, viewing, and the culture of spectacle alongside the more traditional art-historical themes of imperial patronage and stylistic change, Elsner presents a fresh and challenging account of a rich cultural crucible in which many developments of later European art had their origins. Outstanding collection of art, well written, a great buy | Customer Rating: | For anyone interested in ancient Rome, ancient art, and the beginning of the Christian era, this is a great buy. Glossy, thick pages, marvelous color photographs, and a broad overview of the subject.
The Romans had a schizophrenic reaction to art. On one hand, art itself, whether sculptures or paintings or mosaics, was revered. On the other hand, the artists who created the pieces were considered of no consequence, perhaps because so many of them were slaves.
The Roman elite considered "no marker of identity...more profound...than the 'private' house" (p 44) and everyone longed to have a grand home, filled with mosaics of chariot racing and fishing and pictures of the gods. Cicero almost bankrupted himself purchasing statues.
Every city under Roman rule had plenty of imperial propaganda in the form of portraits or statues of the emperor. The Romans famously preferred truth in portraiture, as opposed to the Greeks. So the portraits of Augustus, for example, did portray his likeness, although the Augustus of the official statues never aged. Even when Augustus was near death, his imperial portraits showed a young man.
As the empire grew, new cults sprouted. One such cult was that of Mithras. "What was different about Mithras was his novelty, as a newly created god adapted from the Persian Mithra some time in the first or second century (p 208).
As Christians slowly took over the empire they triumphantly took over deserted temples. For example, Christian churches in Rome were triumphantly built "over Mithraea, for instance San Clemente and Santa Prisca" (p 218). | still waiting | Customer Rating: | | More than one month after I innitially order, it is still weeks away from being delivered! | Elsner Does It | Customer Rating: | | This very readable book interweaves Roman Imperial Art from the second century of our era with evolving Christian traditions. The reader comes away with a nuanced and richly textured picture of place of Christian art in the broader visual culture of the Late Empire. Altogether a wonderful single-volume treatment of this complex period. This book shows us what can be lost when we study art in narrow catagories. Once you read it you won't soon forget that Early Christian art is also Roman art. I found it a very good read. |
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