Medieval Cyprus:Studies in Art, Architecture, and History in Memory of Doula MourikiPrinceton University Press edited by Nancy P. Sevcenko and Christopher Moss ISBN: 0691007357 price: $55.00 hardcover
Cyprus has always shown a remarkable openness to divergent
cultures--at no time more than in the Middle Ages, when
successive Byzantine and Latin conquerors settled on the island
and dominated its art. These two societies profoundly influenced
each other and their interchange resulted in art of great
richness and diversity. The fourteen distinguished and generously
illustrated studies in this volume provide sharply focused views
of the island's artistic evolution in this period, beginning with
an archaeological report on Early Christian graves built into
abandoned pagan tombs in the fifth century and ending with an
essay on the extravagant Venetian-style Cypriot frescoes of the
sixteenth century. In between are a wide range of studies of
Byzantine Cypriot architecture, stone carvings, frescoes, icons,
illuminated manuscripts, and ceramics.
The contributors draw on these works, many of which are poorly
known and some of which have never before been reproduced, to
reopen such crucial questions as whether artistic influences were
provincial or metropolitan and to disentangle the many medieval
cultural traditions that are preserved so uniquely in Cyprus. In
the process, they reveal the astonishing tenacity and flexibility
of the Byzantine style. The volume also contains an assessment of
the distinguished Greek scholar Doula Mouriki's contribution to
the study of Byzantine art and a bibliography of her many
publications.
The contributors are Mary Aspra-Vardavakis, Charalambos
Bakirtzis, Charalambos Bouras, Susan Boyd, Carolyn L. Connor,
Efthalia Constantinides, Slobodan Curcic, Melita Emmanuel,
Irmgard Hutter, Henry Maguire, Athanasios Papageorghiou, Demetra
Papanikola-Bakirtzis, Panayiotis L. Vocotopoulos, and Vera von
Falkenhausen.
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