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Crosslistings: ARHA 212 |
This course may be repeated for credit.
Viewing Greek painted pots in museums, perched securely in their vitrines, we think of them as fine art objects of great value-both for us and to the ancients. But before plastic, glass, and cardboard, there was clay.
Our main focus will be Athenian black- and red-figure vases; the elaborately painted pots we all too frequently assume are the acme of Greek vases. We will examines these objects in several different ways: from
artifact
excavated in archeological trenches to antiquities stolen to fuel the art trade; from object d'art (for us) to fine, sympotic dinnerware (for ancient Greeks); finally from representations to ancient daily life. We will
glance
at utilitarian (plain) pottery, considering the shapes and their daily uses; to establish a sense of historical development and antecedents, we will consider earlier, Geometric and Corinthian, wares. We shall explore
the
varieties of ways these pots have been studied, familiarizing ourselves with the standard research tools (CORPUS VASORUM ANTIQUORUM, Beazley's ATHENIAN BLACK-FIGURE VASES and ATHENIAN RED-FIGURE VASES, LEXICON
ICONOGRAPHICUM
MYTHOLOGIAE CLASSICAE, among others), and some of the more illuminating studies of these pots in the various scholarly domains (attribution, form & iconographic studies, among others). Aiming to additional, more
in-depth
studies of Greek painted pots.
This course serves as an introduction to the visual wealth of ancient Greek painted pots (commonly called "vases"), and to several schools of studying these material artifacts. We
will consider
questions of attribution, style, form and function, original use or context for these objects, and the cultural studies made possible by a reading of the images painted on these pots. We take as our primary objective
the
task, simultaneously banal and profound, learning to look at Greek vases, to read these objects, and to read and interpret these images. This course will complement courses in ancient Greek history, ancient Greek
language
and literature, Classical Greek civilization, as well as courses in Art History.
COURSE FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion
Level: UGRD Credit: 1 Gen Ed Area Dept: HA CLAS Grading Mode: Student Option
Prerequisites: NONE Links to Web Resources For This Course.
Last Updated on MAR-19-2004
Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459