About This Book
A scholarly monograph examines the vase painter Douris and his contemporaries, arguing that their images enact myth and artistic intent rather than simply illustrating literary texts. It reconstructs the social position of vase painters, studio practice, and technical procedures, and presents close analyses of signature vases to trace compositional habits, figural style, and decorative motifs. Mythological scenes are read as expressions of collective thought rendered in line and colour, and the study connects these readings to broader questions about the autonomy and development of Greek vase-painting. A concluding discussion synthesizes evidence to show how individual painters shaped the evolution of red-figure technique.
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