This book explores the persona of the artist in Archaic and Classical Greek art and literature. Guy Hedreen argues that artistic subjectivity first expressed in Athenian vase-painting of the sixth century BCE and intensively explored by Euphronios developed alongside a self-consciously constructed persona of the poet. He explains how poets like Archilochos and Hipponax identified with the wily Homeric character of Odysseus as a prototype of the successful narrator and how the lame yet resourceful artist-god Hephaistos is emulated by Archaic vase-painters such as Kleitias. In lyric poetry and pictorial art Hedreen traces a widespread conception of the artist or poet as socially marginal and sometimes physically imperfect but rhetorically clever technically peerless and a master of fiction. Bringing together in a sustained analysis the roots of subjectivity across media this book offers a new way of studying the relationship between poetry and art in ancient Greece.
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