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Art and Myth in Ancient Greece:

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The ancient Greeks recorded their mythology on vase paintings, engraved gems, and bronze and stone sculptures, offering depictions that often predate any references to the myths in literature or recount alternative, unfamiliar versions of these tales. In some cases, visual art provides our only evidence of these myths, as there are no surviving accounts in ancient Greek literature of stories such as the Fall of Troy or Theseus and the Minotaur.


Art and Myth in Ancient Greece is a comprehensive survey of myth as it appears in Greek art. This classic volume has been updated with text and full-color images of more than three hundred scenes from Greek sculptures, vases, and gems. Aiding in the identification of mythological scenes and explaining chronological developments in style and subject matter, this book is an essential reference for anyone interested in the art, drama, poetry, or religion of ancient Greece.

467 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 1, 1991

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Thomas H. Carpenter

12 books4 followers

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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Monty Milne.
1,030 reviews75 followers
November 27, 2021
This is an enjoyable book but it sets out its limited scope in the preface: it is about identifying myths, not explaining them or theorising about them. I must admit this was a bit disappointing – it would have been so interesting to have something deeper than just identification, description, and art. But, of course, this would have been a completely different (and much bigger) kind of book.

The really fascinating discovery for me was to realise just how much we don’t know because of gaps in the surviving literature. An example would be Jason and the Golden Fleece: there are many depictions of a dragon swallowing Jason and then vomiting him up again. These are all definitely Jason the Argonaut (Carpenter points out the obvious iconographical clues which show why) but none of the literary descriptions we have say anything about the vomiting dragon, whose role in the myth therefore remain mysterious and unknown. There are many other examples, and many pictorial representations which we assume represent myths which have been lost, but must have once been familiar to those who produced them and saw them. This is all intriguing stuff. (And why is that some myths became hugely popular at certain times and places, only to fall out of popularity later and be replaced by others? What is it that caused these changes in fashion? This too raises many interesting questions, not explored here).

Nevertheless, within its limitations, this is an excellent book and as handsomely produced and illustrated as everything produced by the estimable Thames & Hudson.
Profile Image for Gavin White.
Author 4 books27 followers
December 20, 2013
I read this ages ago and have occasionally come back to it to explore certain chapters. The author takes various myths or heroes and explores them from an artistic and literary perspective. For me the real value of this book is that it shows that written myths and ancient art often don't correspond with each other. Greek artworks often show that there were alternative versions of myths known in ancient times with different protagonists or events. Sometimes one icon, for instance Pegasus and Medusa, can even have different interpretations applied to it. The book really helped me to start thinking about myths in very pictorial terms; and to concentrate on this as the central proposition conveyed by the text.
Profile Image for Linniegayl.
1,364 reviews31 followers
February 15, 2022
I read this for a class project. It was an interesting summary of the depiction of key Greek myths and mythological characters on ancient art and architecture.
242 reviews2 followers
August 6, 2022
'The visual representations of the myth of Herakles (the ninth task) appear nearly two centuries before the earliest surviving literary source and depict a story different from those sources in significant ways' (Carpenter: 173)

This is a book about myths in Ancient Greek Art. The book tells you which myths/episodes were depicted in Ancient Greek Art, or when they were depicted for the first time in Ancient Greek Art.

Unfortunately the book is just a collection of facts and figures. The author hardly ever tries to explain what made a myth so popular to be depicted. When he does though, the reasons have to do with a painting or a play, which do not always work. The author leaves many ideas incomplete in my opinion, like why certain Herakles labours aren't depicted in South Italian vases, or why Athena often wears a helmet and aegis after the middle of the 6th century.

I like how the pictures are in full colour and so close to the text that refers to them. But I wish information on the current location of the vases was in the description text instead of the appendix.

The book defends the importance of vases for knowing about Greek ancient myths and how these vases can sometimes be a more valuable source of information than written texts. The book is good at describing the different ways in which a mythical character/scene can be portrayed in ancient Greek Art, including regional differences. But to me the book remains unambitious and just descriptive.
Profile Image for Maria.
355 reviews24 followers
May 25, 2021
"Art and Myth in Ancient Greece" (1991) by Professor Emeritus at Ohio University Thomas H. Carpenter.

With chapters with the themes of:
1. Introduction
2. A Demonstration of Method: The Return of Hephaistos; Troilos and Achilles
3. Portraits of the Gods
4. The Ascendancy of the Olympians
5. Perseus; Bellerophon
6. Herakles
7. Theseus
8. Argonauts; Calydonian Boar Hunt
9. The Trojan War
10. The Aftermath of the War



Confusing how the book is set up. In each chapter it's structured by around 15 pages of only text followed everytime by several pages with lots of reference pictures to the connected chapter. To understand fully what is written about, you have to flip pages constantly to have any idea about what Carpenter is writing about. Would rather have the reference near the text, so you don't have to constantly search for answers.

Carpenter delivers what the title of the book is, greek mythology in ancient greek art. You get a feel for the myths and the art pieces, but if you want more information about the different topics and art pieces, you have to read about that somewhere else especially for analysis purposes.

A different layout and more in depth descriptions, and it would have gotten a higher rating.
Profile Image for Lynn.
10 reviews
May 21, 2017
As per the introduction, this book gives a very topical, general gist of Greek myths and their respective depictions. The book is good for its purposes. You would have to look elsewhere for further analysis of any particular myth/artwork.
Profile Image for Valéria.
126 reviews26 followers
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July 22, 2023
I believe this book could have been much more enjoyable if the writer had diverted from constantly addressing what was supposed to be an exploration of Art and Myth in Ancient Greece as a catalog of dates and places were the pottery was originated.

To be honest I couldn’t see the words ‘red figured’ or ‘black figured pottery’ after reading this without some sort of disdain out of the sheer quantity of times they were repeated again and again when, at certain moments, it was clearly unnecessary.

Notable but nothing too groundbreaking to anyone that has studied Ancient Greek Art previously.

Profile Image for Michael Norwitz.
Author 16 books12 followers
October 20, 2025
While narrow in scope, Carpenter's little volume will be greatly interesting to anyone researching Greek myth, or the history of art. He walks us through several classic myths and details how they are portrayed on pottery or sculptures of antiquity; including (intriguingly but frustratingly enough), quite a few stories which we only have suggestions of based on visuals, but for which no written documentation had survived.
Profile Image for Xander.
107 reviews2 followers
May 18, 2020
Information dump followed by an image dump in all chapters. Not particularly fluid and not a great writing style. Overall, some good choices of images and some good info. Will come in useful for later referencing.
Profile Image for Rosa.
22 reviews
January 18, 2021
Information dump that manages to be both incredibly banal and confusing simultaneously
Profile Image for Ingrid.
10 reviews
May 28, 2008
This book was not the easiest to follow due to it's images set in clumps that one has to refer back to in order to understand the text. It would benefit much from having the image right next to the text. Someone reading this would need to have a clear knowledge of the myth behind the artwork to fully grasp the meanings of the readings. This would be a good book to pull images and text from for an in-class shared experience for the students.
Profile Image for Molly Ringle.
Author 16 books407 followers
Read
March 13, 2013
I didn't read every word of all chapters; I skimmed some. But this was an interesting and different angle from which to come at Greek mythology, as well as serving as a useful bit of ancient art history. At least I now can use terms like "red-figure" and "black-figure," and have a better idea of why the scenes are often all jumbled together with lots of action seemingly happening at once. (Answer: because they didn't know about comic-book-style frames yet to separate one scene from another.)
6 reviews2 followers
January 9, 2011
An excellent introduction to exactly that which it claims: Art and Myth in Ancient Greece. Text and illustrations are sufficient to fan the flames of a lifelong passion for all things Greek. Consider yourself warned.
Profile Image for Seda.
8 reviews9 followers
October 26, 2012
I use this book for a art history class and it is very beneficial. Great pictures of the Ancient Greek arts and neatly captioned and very explanatory. If you are majoring in art, or interested in Ancient Greek art I highly recommend this book.
Profile Image for Manuel Vega.
Author 40 books32 followers
September 21, 2012
The best are the pictures, grouped in myths. Really extensive. Unfortunately, the author avoids entirely other discussion than the artistic.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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