Egypt

Egypt The Visual Encyclopedia of Art

Paperback (16 Aug 2012)

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Publisher's Synopsis

No civilization has left such imposing and fascinating vestiges as that of Egypt, and yet so little trace of the "human." In ancient Egypt art was not an expression of the human world but a living and active representation of the act of creation. The extreme and forceful nature of the Nile Valley—where the fertile plain runs without a break into the desert, and the annual flooding erases the landscape in a relentless cycle as it brings new life—has shaped Egyptian art. It is in the first place a direct emanation of the divine, and as such proposes the order established by the gods with mathematical rigor and in strictly codified canons. Religion was everything and everything was religion in ancient Egypt. Art had no aesthetic value in this world. Art was a symbol of nature; it has to capture its essence rather than imitate it, and left no freedom or independence of expression to the individual. The works that adorn temple

Book information

ISBN: 9781566499705
Publisher: Welcome Rain Publishers
Imprint: Welcome Rain Publishers
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 256
Weight: 1293g
Height: 239mm
Width: 198mm
Spine width: 33mm