Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > BC to 500 CE, Ancient & classical world
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Collectors, Scholars, and Forgers in the Ancient World - Object Lessons (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,040
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Collectors, Scholars, and Forgers in the Ancient World - Object Lessons (Hardcover)
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Collectors, Scholars, and Forgers in the Ancient World focuses on
the fascination which works of art, texts, and antiquarian objects
inspired in Greeks and Romans in antiquity and draws parallels with
other cultures and eras to offer contexts for understanding that
fascination. Statues, bronze weapons, books, and bones might have
been prized for various reasons: because they had religious value,
were the work of highly regarded artists and writers, had been
possessed by famous mythological figures, or were relics of a long
disappeared past. However, attitudes towards these objects also
changed over time: sculpture which was originally created for a
religious purpose became valuable as art and could be removed from
its original setting, while historians discovered value in
inscriptions and other texts for supporting historical arguments
and literary scholars sought early manuscripts to establish what
authors really wrote. As early as the Hellenistic era, some Greeks
and Romans began to collect objects and might even display them in
palaces, villas, or gardens; as these objects acquired value, a
demand was created for more of them, and so copyists and forgers
created additional pieces - while copyists imitated existing pieces
of art, sometimes adapting to their new settings, forgers created
new pieces to complete a collection, fill a gap in historical
knowledge, make some money, or to indulge in literary play with
knowledgeable readers. The study of forged relics is able to reveal
not only what artefacts the Greeks and Romans placed value on, but
also what they believed they understood about their past and how
they interpreted the evidence for it. Drawing on the latest
scholarship on forgery and fakes, as well as a range of examples,
this book combines stories about frauds with an analysis of their
significance, and illuminates and explores the link between
collectors, scholars, and forgers in order to offer us a way to
better understand the power that objects held over the ancient
Greeks and Romans.
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