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Combat scenes in classical Greek art as "beautiful objects": the expressive power of visual omissionMare, EM 04 April 2008 (has links)
Two explanations are proposed for the fact that classical scenes depicting a combat between a Greek
warrior and an opponent are composed in a restrained way, in that the actual violence of maiming and
killing is not explicitly represented. The first explanation is speculative as a visual parallel with the
treatment of violence in classical tragedy, while the second is based on a formal, art historical explanation
of a motif derived from Egyptian art. In a concluding section it is pointed out that in Hellenistic
art violence becomes explicit in the depictions of war and combat.
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