The Icons of Their Bodies: Saints and Their Images in ByzantiumPrinceton University Press Henry Maguire ISBN: 0691050074 price: $29.95 paperback
The Byzantines surrounded themselves with their saints,
invisible but constant companions, who were made visible by
dreams, visions, and art. The composition and presentation of
this imagined gallery followed a logical structure, a construct
that was itself a collective work of art created by Byzantine
society. The purpose of this book is to analyze the logic of the
saint's image in Byzantium, both in portraits and in narrative
scenes. Here Henry Maguire argues that the Byzantines gave to
their images differing formal characteristics of movement,
modeling, depth, and differentiation, according to the tasks that
the icons were called upon to perform in the all-important
business of communication between the visible and the invisible
worlds.
The book draws extensively on sources that have been relatively
little utilized by art historians. It considers both domestic and
ecclesiastical artifacts, showing how the former raised the
problem of access by lay men and women to the supernatural and
fueled the debates concerning the role of images in the Christian
cult. Special attention is paid to the poems inscribed by the
Byzantines upon their icons, and to the written lives of their
saints, texts that offer the most direct and vivid insight into
the everyday experience of art in Byzantium. The overall purpose
of the book is to provide a new view of Byzantine art, one that
integrates formal analysis with both theology and social history.
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