Dynamic Splendor: The Wall Mosaics in the Cathedral of Eufrasius at Porec

Author:   Ann Terry ,  Henry Maguire (Johns Hopkins University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271028736


Pages:   416
Publication Date:   20 February 2007
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Dynamic Splendor: The Wall Mosaics in the Cathedral of Eufrasius at Porec


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Overview

Dynamic Splendor introduces a cycle of sixth-century mosaics little known to scholars, though they are comparable in quality and interest to famed mosaics in Italy and elsewhere. Ann Terry and Henry Maguire provide the first comprehensive account of the history and meaning of the mosaics along with the first high-quality photographic documentation of the ensemble. It has only recently been possible to study the mosaics at Porec closely, due to favorable conditions in Croatian Istria, where the mosaics reside, and to the discovery of the original restoration documents in Vienna and Trieste. Terry and Maguire have tracked the condition and restoration of these works, distinguishing between the original mosaics and later contributions. Beyond creating an important archival source, the authors consider the making of the mosaics, their thematic structure, their relationship to the cathedral complex, and their connection to the patron, Bishop Eufrasius, while drawing parallels with other renowned works.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ann Terry ,  Henry Maguire (Johns Hopkins University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 25.40cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 30.50cm
Weight:   3.656kg
ISBN:  

9780271028736


ISBN 10:   0271028734
Pages:   416
Publication Date:   20 February 2007
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Note to Readers Introduction 1. Documentation of the Mosaics Prior to the Late Nineteenth-Century Restorations 2. Philosophy and Methods of the Restorers 3. Porec and Ravenna: Affiliations and Chronology 4. Mosaic Artistry in Sixth-Century Porec 5. Sixth-Century Iconography: Questions of Identification 6. Sixth-Century Iconology: Questions of Meaning Conclusion: Mosaic as a Dynamic Medium Appendix I: Survey of Authentic and Restored Sections Appendix II: A Note on Twentieth-Century Restorations Notes Frequently Cited Sources Index Illustrations Volume List of Illustrations Figures and Plates Illustrations Credits

Reviews

Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. Liz James, Art History


The book is a resource to all students of the sixth century, and incidentally anyone interested in nineteenth-century medievalism and restoration. --Caroline J. Goodson, Early Medieval Europe


At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. --Eric Banks, BookForum


Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. --Liz James, Art History Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. --Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. --Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. --A.J. Wharton, Choice At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. --Eric Banks, BookForum The book is a resource to all students of the sixth century, and incidentally anyone interested in nineteenth-century medievalism and restoration. --Caroline J. Goodson, Early Medieval Europe With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. --Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. --Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University


The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. --A.J. Wharton, Choice This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. --Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. --Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. --Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. --Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. --Eric Banks, BookForum The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. A.J. Wharton, Choice This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. Eric Banks, BookForum The book is a resource to all students of the sixth century, and incidentally anyone interested in nineteenth-century medievalism and restoration. --Caroline J. Goodson, Early Medieval Europe Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. --Liz James, Art History With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. --Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. --Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. --Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. --A.J. Wharton, Choice At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. --Eric Banks, BookForum Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. --Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. Liz James, Art History With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. A.J. Wharton, Choice At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. Eric Banks, BookForum Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. Liz James, Art History With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. A.J. Wharton, Choice At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. Eric Banks, BookForum Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. --Liz James, Art History With the publication of Dynamic Splendor, Ann Terry and Henry Maguire have erected a monument of their own in honor of the Basilica Eufrasiana. . . . It will serve many uses: as an object of aesthetic appreciation, a record of valuable research, and a thoughtful model for future monographs. --Benjamin Anderson, Bryn Mawr Classical Review (BMCR) Beautifully and extensively illustrated with color photographs of the mosaics in the basilica together with a generous number of comparanda, this book recuperates for scholars a major, long ignored monumental program. --Elizabeth S. Bolman, Journal of Early Christian Studies This magnificent two-volume work presents the sixth-century mosaics that survive in the three apses of the church in all their glory, but also in all their controversy. With more than two hundred colour photographs, the book provides invaluable visual documentation and it is hard to envisage it being surpassed in the future. This is an indispensable research tool for anyone interested in Early Christian art. --Antony Eastmond, Burlington Magazine The number and quality of the images as well as its high standard of scholarship make this handsomely produced boxed set, priced at only $95, surely the best buy in the book market now. The press deserves congratulations. --A.J. Wharton, Choice At a time when many academic publishers speculate about the demise of the art-history monograph, Dynamic Splendor is a welcome retort about what would be lost without the commitment of university presses to rigorous and elegant scholarship. --Eric Banks, BookForum Long overshadowed by their more extensive neighbors at Ravenna and Venice, the glittering mosaics of Porec have rarely been subjected to detailed scrutiny. Repeatedly restored in the late nineteenth century, they have been regarded with suspicion by scholars and quickly passed over by tourists. Terry and Maguire compensate for this neglect with meticulous examination from the scaffold and judicious study of the relative merits of pre-restoration drawings, photos, and written records . . . with a battery of color photographs unparalleled in any other work on early Byzantine mosaic. --Anthony Cutler, The Pennsylvania State University


Dynamic Splendor, by Ann Terry and Henry Maguire, might be described as a traditional monograph on the internal decoration of a particular building, one that adopts an implicit model of Panofskian analysis by opening with questions of formal perception moving through a discussion of the iconography of the art works, and concluding with a discussion of iconology. And there is nothing wrong with that, especially when it it is as well executed as this. Indeed, it is the level of formal analysis that makes the book so distinctive and so interesting. --Liz James, Art History


Author Information

Ann Terry is an independent scholar and the author of A Century of Archaeology at Porec (1847-1947) with Ffiona Gilmore Eaches (2001). Henry Maguire is Professor in the Johns Hopkins History of Art Department. His publications include Earth and Ocean: The Terrestrial World in Early Byzantine Art (Penn State, 1987), the edited volume Byzantine Magic (1995), and Icons of Their Bodies: Saints and Their Images in Byzantium (1996).

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