Masking the Blow: The Scene of Representation in Late Prehistoric Egyptian Art (California Studies in the History of Art)

Masking the Blow: The Scene of Representation in Late Prehistoric Egyptian Art (California Studies in the History of Art) image
ISBN-10:

0520074882

ISBN-13:

9780520074880

Author(s): Davis, Whitney
Edition: y First edition
Released: Dec 07, 1992
Format: Hardcover, 318 pages
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Description:

The meaning of late prehistoric Egyptian images has until now been tantalizingly mysterious, as little understood as the circumstances of their production. As a result, analyses of these images have been general and often incorrectly illustrated. Whitney Davis now provides a welcome remedy in this detailed reinterpretation of the images carved on ivory knife handles and schist cosmetic palettes. These images are among the most important documents of early Egyptian history and include the Narmer Palette, often considered the very inception of ancient Egyptian image making.

Davis deciphers the intriguing pictorial narratives and complex metaphors of images that are concerned with "masking the blow" of the ruler. "Masking the blow" refers to the ways that the images—from hunted animals to human antagonists—represent, elide, or suppress the depiction of a ruler's violent act of conquering an enemy.

Examining late prehistoric Egyptian images in light of contemporary visual theory and illustrating his analyses with excellent reproductions, Davis goes beyond the usual concern for stylistic development and iconographic meanings that characterize prior studies. His work will greatly interest art historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, and students of the visual arts.












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