This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on the relationship of epinician poets with their patrons, this paper broadens the focus of enquiry to include other melic genres and, in addition to the verbal, to look at the visual arts as well, i.e. melic representations of communities that sponsor songs and of communities or individuals that sponsor other art-forms such as sculpture, architecture, and precious objects. Taking as starting point Xenophon’s depiction of Simonides in Hiero, I discuss epigrams XXVII and XXVIII Page and relevant testimonia that show Simonides’ keen interest in Athenian dithyrambic contests; Bacchylides’ Ode 19, probably composed for the Great Dionysia; Pindar’s Pyt...
A society that regards nature as divine is constantly reminded of its dependence on the gods. It com...
This paper offers a survey of votive offerings related to equestrian contests. After discussing seve...
In offering a brief sketch of some aspects of Herodotus’ use of lyric poetry I shall restrict myself...
This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on th...
Pindar’s epinikian odes were poems commissioned to celebrate athletic victories in the first half of...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
In The Reception of Greek Lyric Poetry in the Ancient World: Transmission, Canonization and Paratext...
This dissertation argues that the victory ode was a genre characterized by formal innovation and exp...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022This dissertation critiques the notion that the 5th ce...
The prescriptions on how to eulogize the city, provided in 3rd century by Menander Rhetor in his tre...
The biographical tradition asserts that Euripides had been a painter before he was a tragedian and t...
Greek lyric poets of the early fifth century largely addressed local audiences while promising panhe...
The article investigates the uses to which the figures of the Muse(s) are put in the poetics of Pind...
Athenian vase-painters endeavoured to produce scenes which appealed to as many different customers a...
International audienceEven though Theocritus' poetry is often associated by modern readers with visu...
A society that regards nature as divine is constantly reminded of its dependence on the gods. It com...
This paper offers a survey of votive offerings related to equestrian contests. After discussing seve...
In offering a brief sketch of some aspects of Herodotus’ use of lyric poetry I shall restrict myself...
This paper explores the melic poets’ take on art and its sponsors. Since much has been written on th...
Pindar’s epinikian odes were poems commissioned to celebrate athletic victories in the first half of...
Over the last decade a growing number of scholars have questioned the veracity of the longstanding c...
In The Reception of Greek Lyric Poetry in the Ancient World: Transmission, Canonization and Paratext...
This dissertation argues that the victory ode was a genre characterized by formal innovation and exp...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022This dissertation critiques the notion that the 5th ce...
The prescriptions on how to eulogize the city, provided in 3rd century by Menander Rhetor in his tre...
The biographical tradition asserts that Euripides had been a painter before he was a tragedian and t...
Greek lyric poets of the early fifth century largely addressed local audiences while promising panhe...
The article investigates the uses to which the figures of the Muse(s) are put in the poetics of Pind...
Athenian vase-painters endeavoured to produce scenes which appealed to as many different customers a...
International audienceEven though Theocritus' poetry is often associated by modern readers with visu...
A society that regards nature as divine is constantly reminded of its dependence on the gods. It com...
This paper offers a survey of votive offerings related to equestrian contests. After discussing seve...
In offering a brief sketch of some aspects of Herodotus’ use of lyric poetry I shall restrict myself...