The Book
If the soul is Christian, beauty is Greek. Freud defines aesthetics as the intellectual construction of personal parameters that express themselves in sublime emotions. In Greek sculpture, man becomes God, and the gods lend their image to humanity. Defying the laws of gravity, Greek sculptors explored the harmony, forms, and spaces that have shaped our unconscious according to the canons of eternal beauty for more than 2,000 years.
Art historian Edmund von Mach reflects on the epic story of how the hand of man came to transform marble into works of art, art that contributed substantially to the permanent legacy of civilisations.
This work is a study of Greek sculpture between the 7th and the 1st centuries BCE, based on an extensive examination of iconography and presented as an erudite yet accessible text for everyone.
The Author
Edmund von Mach (1870-1927) was an art historian and a professor at the department of fine arts of Harvard University. He wrote several books on ancient art such as A Handbook of Greek and Roman Sculpture but also on recent subjects such as Outlines of the History of Painting and The Art of Painting in the Nineteenth Century.
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