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Komast Dancers in Archaic Greek Art

Part of the Oxford Monographs on Classical Archaeology series
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Komast figures (literally `revellers') on black-figure vases have long been associated with the worship of Dionysos and the origins of Greek drama.

In this fully illustrated study, Tyler Jo Smith takes a fresh look at the evidence for komasts, both on vases and in other artistic media produced throughout Archaic Greece.

She concludes that the meaning of the dancing figures differs between different regions, such as Corinth, Athens, and Laconia.

Komasts are instrumental to the spread of the human figure in early Archaic Greek art and a vital link in the story of both visual and festival culture in Greece during the sixth century BC.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0199578656 / 9780199578658
Hardback
709.38
27/05/2010
United Kingdom
English
xxx, 357 p. : ill.
26 cm