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- Title
The Embodied Object: Recensions of the Dead on Roman Sarcophagi.
- Authors
Elsner, Jaś
- Abstract
The Roman sarcophagus uses the visual forms of consolatory celebration to frame the actual body of the deceased. Its rhetorics of eulogy are not merely performative but are directly existential, since its form and function are entirely dependent on the act of containing a corpse. In sarcophagi, the frequency of portraiture as a major element of decoration adds a further frisson to the question of embodiment. This essay touches on all forms of portraiture on Roman sarcophagi but focuses on three-dimensional reclining statues carved on lids – both fine finished portrait heads and so-called ‘unfinished’ or ‘blank’ and sometimes ‘pseudo-animate’ faces – in relation to their play with the thematic of embodiment, presence and absence.
- Subjects
ROMAN sarcophagi; DEAD in art; HUMAN body &; society; ROMAN mythology in art; STATUES
- Publication
Art History, 2018, Vol 41, Issue 3, p546
- ISSN
0141-6790
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1467-8365.12387