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DTSTAMP:20260713T073002Z
DTSTART:20240220T170000
DTEND:20240220T190000
SUMMARY:Art History Faculty Lecture | Mark Abbe
DESCRIPTION:Image: Portrait of Alexander. Marble with&nbsp;painting and gilding. H. 18.5 cm.,&nbsp;c. third century BC. Princeton University Art Museum, inv. 2008.330.&nbsp;\n&nbsp;\nAssociate Professor of Art History Mark Abbe will present the lecture “Recontextualizing a gilded marble portrait of Alexander the Great from Egypt&nbsp;”\n&nbsp;\nLecture Abstract\n“Recontextualizing a gilded marble portrait of Alexander the Great from Egypt”&nbsp;\nIt is increasingly recognized that the practices of extensively gilding bronze and marble statuary developed in the Hellenistic Greek world (c. late 4th-1st&nbsp;centuries BC), long before they became more&nbsp;widespread&nbsp;in Roman antiquity.&nbsp;However, the&nbsp;very&nbsp;fragmentary remains of such gilding and the&nbsp;original&nbsp;meanings of these rare practices in Greek art&nbsp;and visual culture&nbsp;have only begun to be systematically explored. This presentation&nbsp;reexamines the early history of gilding&nbsp;portrait statuary&nbsp;in Greece and&nbsp;then distills&nbsp;technical&nbsp;investigations into a unique&nbsp;early&nbsp;example of such&nbsp;polychromy&nbsp;fortuitously preserved&nbsp;on a marble portrait&nbsp;head&nbsp;of Alexander the Great&nbsp;from the site of&nbsp;Hermopolis&nbsp;Magna in&nbsp;Ptolemaic&nbsp;Egypt. The little-noted origins of&nbsp;this head reward investigation and allow&nbsp;the multiple, complex&nbsp;resonances of&nbsp;such&nbsp;gilding&nbsp;on&nbsp;royal&nbsp;portraits&nbsp;in the Hellenistic&nbsp;world&nbsp;to be explored&nbsp;in&nbsp;a specific&nbsp;historical and&nbsp;cultural&nbsp;context.
LOCATION:Lamar Dodd School of Art | N100
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