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Note on Two Archaistic Reliefs in Oxford
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
Extract
Miss Hutton's valuable article on the archaistic reliefs in Oxford contains two errors, which may as well be corrected at once. The first was pointed out to me by Mr. W. H. Buckler. Of the left-hand nymph in the representation of Pan teased, Miss Hutton writes that the artist ‘twisted the upper portion of her body round into a three-quarters frontal position, which he balanced by flinging the right arm back to fill the empty space behind the body. There is therefore no physical contact between the first nymph and Pan.’ As a matter of fact she was grasping the end of Pan's leopard-skin with her right hand, just as in the other reliefs with the same subject, and swinging not her right but her left arm back.
The second slip is in the account of the Rhodian nymph relief. According to Miss Hutton, ‘the whole surface has been so much rubbed down to conceal damage that the right-hand figure, whose heavy peplos had originally a pleated kolpos with swallow-tail points, appears to be clad in a transparent veil over an equally transparent tunic.’
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- Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1930
References
1 J.H.S., xlix. pp. 240–5 and Pl. XIV.
2 Ibid., Pl. XIV, 1.
3 Ibid., p. 242, top.
4 Schmidt, E., Archaistische Kunst, Pl. XIV, 2Google Scholar, and Pl. XV, 1.
5 J.H.S., xlix. Pl. XIV, 2.
6 Ibid., p. 243.
7 Ibid., Pl. XIV, 1.
8 Schmidt, op. cit., Pl. XIV, 2, Pl. XIV, 1, and Pl. XV, 1.
9 See Hauser, , Die neu-attischen Reliefs, Pl. I, 5Google Scholar, and pp. 34–5, nos. 43a and 44.
10 Bulle, Archaisierende griechische Rundplastik, Pl. VII, no. 50; Pl. I, no. 10; Pl. VII. no. 49; Pl. VI, no. 43.