Seeing Color in Classical Art, a new book by Professor Jennifer Stager

Seeing Color in Classical Art, a new book by Professor Jennifer Stager

The History of Art is delighted to announce that Professor Jennifer Stager’s book “Seeing Color in Classical Art: Theory, Practice, and Reception, from Antiquity to the Present” (Cambridge University Press, 2022), already available in the UK, will be widely available next month. A short conversation between Professor Stager and Professor Pandey (JHU Classics) about Seeing Color is available on the blog of the Cambridge University Press.

Seeing Color in Classical Art offers a new critical account of color as material in ancient Mediterranean art and architecture. Traversing sites from Athens to Antioch, Stager traces color across a variety of media, including handheld panel paintings, painted monumental reliefs, alloyed bronzes, and mosaic floors. This book explores the materiality of color from the ground up through analysis of the pigments, dyes, stones, soils and metals that artists crafted into polychrome forms. Artistic practices also shaped a literary and philosophical landscape encompassing Sapphic lyric, Presocratic atomism, and Theophrastan natural history and produced a discourse on color by ancient Greek writers that reverberates in the present. Despite these abundant traces of color, ancient Mediterranean art has long been reduced to the white marble of its ruins to stage an idealized, monochrome picture of the past. Stager examines the process by which this reception tradition has elevated whiteness and feminized and racialized color. In response, this book illuminates the construction of the category of the classical in modernity and challenges its claims to order and exceptionalism. Ultimately, Stager harnesses ancient ideas of materiality, care, landscape, visual exchange, and artistic atomism to theorize color in the ancient Mediterranean and its afterlives.