The Pennsylvania State University
Cover for the book Aegean Painting in the Bronze Age

Aegean Painting in the Bronze Age

Sara Immerwahr
  • Publish Date: 10/1/1990
  • Dimensions: 8.5 x 11
  • Page Count: 304 pages
  • Illustrations: 23 color/92 b&w illustrations
  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-0-271-00628-4
“An absolutely first-class piece of work, the only book-length study ever done on Aegean painting, a monograph that is bound to stand as a classic for many years to come.”
“An authoritative, important, and useful contribution to the scholarly literature on early Greece. There is no other comprehensive survey of Aegean painting. It will be of enormous value to students and professionals in the fields of Classical and professionals in the fields of Classical archaeology and analyzes the surviving examples of Aegean painting and puts them into a coherent historical sequence.”

Aegean Painting in the Bronze Age is intended as a handbook for the art historian and archaeologist, with a full catalogue of examples (arranged according to site), critical discussion of the problems of chronology, a comprehensive bibliography, maps, drawings of details, and more than 100 photographic plates, 23 in color. This is the only book to give a synthesis of painting and pictorial art from its beginnings in Prepalatial Crete to the collapse of Bronze Age civilization in the Aegean.

Immerwahr traces the development of Aegean painting from its origins in Crete through its spread to the Cycladic islands and to the Greek mainland, where it gave rise to the specific Mycenaean style. She studies primarily wall painting but refers also to painting on pottery and the pictorial art of seal engraving. The question of foreign influence from Egypt and Mesopotamia is discussed in connection with the origins of Minoan painting, and the new frescoes from Akrotiri on Thera are used to supplement the much more fragmentary paintings from Sir Arthur Evan's excavations at Knossos. Immerwahr also explores the interrelationship of the Minoan Cretans, the Cycladic islanders with their Minoanized enclaves on Thera and Melos, and the early Greek Mycenean mainlanders.

Sara A. Immerwahr is Professor Emeritus of History of Art, University of North Carolina. She is the author of The Neolithic and Bronze Ages and Early Burials from the Agora Cemeteries.

Other Ways to Acquire

Buy from Amazon.com
Buy from an Independent Bookstore
Buy from Powell's Books
Buy from Barnes and Noble.com
Get a License to Reuse
Find in a Library

Related Subjects

YOUR SHOPPING CART (EMPTY)