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Elie Foure was VERY passionate about Greek and Roman art and this comes across very articulately in his study of Antiquity. It was the first deeper study I read about the various artists at the time and the origins of Greek mastery of sculpture and mosaics and how the Romans copies and modified them. A must for the art student!
Read the last volume, The Spirit of the Forms, translated by Walter Pach. 1937 printing with first owner's name written inside and year '37 -- bought from amazon. Christ, if only today's art critics could write like this dude.
I have two hardcover volumes of this in English -- vol. 1 Ancient Art and vol. 2 Medieval Art. Beautiful images and brilliant writing. Came upon them when it was referenced by Henry Miller in one of his books as some of the best writing he'd ever read. Totally agree.
This man could write. History of Art is filled with beautiful, rhapsodic prose, reminiscent of the great Proust. While some knowledge of Egyptian, Greek, or Assyrian history will enhance the experience of the reader, Faure’s poetic journey through the art of ancient civilizations long past can be appreciated by anyone. Truly an underrepresented gem.
This History of ancient Art is condensing Nietzsche's genius, Elie Faure's feather, and ancients fever. A beautiful, scholar, and unfortunately unpopular book, that should be read by every art enthusiast.