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Computer aided techniques for the attribution of Attic black-figure vase-paintings using the Princeton painter as a model.Ryan, Adrian John. January 2009 (has links)
Because of their abundance and because of the insight into the ancient world
offered by the depictions on their decorated surfaces, Attic painted ceramics
are an extremely valuable source of material evidence. Knowing the identities
and personalities of the artists who painted them not only helps us
understand the paintings, but also helps in the process of dating them and,
in the case of sherds, reconstructing them. However, few of the artists signed
their wares, and the identities of the artists have to be revealed through a
close analysis of the style in a process called attribution. The vast majority
of the attributions of archaic Attic vases are due to John Beazley whose
monumental works set the stage for the dominance of attribution studies in
the scholarship of Greek ceramics for most of the 20th century. However, the
number of new scholars trained in this arcane art is dwindling as new avenues
of archaeological research have gained ascendency. A computer-aided
technique for attribution may preserve the benefits of the art while allowing
new scholars to explore previously ignored areas of research. To this end, the
present study provides a theoretical framework for computer-aided attribution,
and using the corpus of the Princeton Painter - a painter active in the
6th century BCE - demonstrates the principal that, by employing pattern
recognition techniques, computers may be trained to serve as an aid in the
attribution process. Three different techniques are presented that are capable
of distinguishing between paintings of the Princeton Painter and some of his
contemporaries with reasonable accuracy. The first uses shape descriptors
to distinguish between the methods employed by respective artists to render
minor anatomical details. The second shows that the relative positions of
cranial features of the male figures on black-figure paintings is an indicator
of style and may also be used as part of the attribution process. Finally a
novel technique is presented that can distinguish between pots constructed
by different potters based on their shape profiles. This technique may offer
valuable clues for attribution when artists are known to work mostly with a
single potter. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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The animal dimension : an investigation into the signification of animals in Homer and archaic Attic black figure vase painting.Pieterse, Tamaryn Lee. January 2000 (has links)
The aim of this dissertation was to investigate the representation of specific types of
animals as they occurred in Homer and archaic Attic black figure vase painting with a
view to understanding bow they were most likely perceived in antiquity. This
involved determining the underlying concepts around which each animal was
constructed by comparing and contrasting the imagery presented in the Homeric
works and archaic Attic black figure vase painting. The primary objective was to
suspend modern and westernized conceptions and to attempt to approach the animal
as from an ancient perspective. The Homeric works were chosen as representative of
the literary evidence since these poems offer the most complete, oldest extant
literature and are the result of a dynamic and continuous oral tradition. Similarly,
archaic Attic black figure vase painting was considered the most suitable corpus of
artistic evidence since the 6th century BC was a time when the artists actively engaged
with and manipulated their themes and subject matter within an established tradition;
this artistic fabric presents a parallel with the Homeric evidence. As a result of this
investigation, clear and discrete concepts and images were determined for each
animal. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2000.
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