The Bucknell Review, 第 17 卷Bucknell University Press, 1969 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 15 筆
第 56 頁
... frontal view of the face was unknown to the Greeks before the seventh century , as it was unknown to their Minoan - Mycen- aean as well as their Egyptian predecessors . The significance of this presentation of the frontal view reveals ...
... frontal view of the face was unknown to the Greeks before the seventh century , as it was unknown to their Minoan - Mycen- aean as well as their Egyptian predecessors . The significance of this presentation of the frontal view reveals ...
第 60 頁
... frontal view . This seems to be the only known case of the god himself being painted with a frontal face . Possibly , the frontality of Dionysus did not become popular because it was not considered befitting to an Olympian god . In ...
... frontal view . This seems to be the only known case of the god himself being painted with a frontal face . Possibly , the frontality of Dionysus did not become popular because it was not considered befitting to an Olympian god . In ...
第 61 頁
... frontal view . The faces of both the youth who holds the mask and the Satyr beneath come very close to being frontal ; but their eyes avoid looking at the spectator . The increasing flexibility and spontaneity of Greek art is evident ...
... frontal view . The faces of both the youth who holds the mask and the Satyr beneath come very close to being frontal ; but their eyes avoid looking at the spectator . The increasing flexibility and spontaneity of Greek art is evident ...
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