How to Describe a Painting
Philostratus and Art Criticism in the Graeco-Roman World
Jaś Elsner author Michael Squire author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:30th Sep '26
£70.00
This title is due to be published on 30th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Argues that Philostratus' Imagines is an unsurpassed work of art criticism – of urgent contemporary relevance in our dawning digital age.
Philostratus' Imagines is unsurpassed as one of the western tradition's most creatively original, scintillating and self-reflexive works of art criticism. This book examines it in the literary, artistic and rhetorical contexts of the 'Second Sophistic', and shows the urgent relevance of its educational project in our own dawning digital age.How should we talk about material objects, especially the virtual two-dimensional impressions of painting? A particularly sophisticated answer is provided by Philostratus' Imagines, one of the world's earliest and greatest works of art criticism. Jaś Elsner and Michael Squire situate this Imperial Greek text in its various 'Second Sophistic' contexts, especially in relation to Graeco-Roman traditions of image-making, aesthetics, rhetoric and the evocation of visual impressions (so-called 'ecphrasis'). They also champion its extraordinarily rich significance for anyone interested in perception, subjective imagination and the emotional leverage of art. If the Imagines remains unsurpassed as one of the western tradition's most creatively original, scintillating and self-reflexive works of art criticism, Elsner and Squire argue, its relevance is also pressingly contemporary: there are modern lessons to be learnt from this ancient project of educating the young – lessons that have a particular urgency in our own dawning digital age.
ISBN: 9781009320078
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1336g
750 pages