Detailed Information on Publication Record
2023
Art from the Borders? Wolfgang Fritz Volbach and the Localization of a Group of Early Christian Ivory Pyxides in the Caucasus
CAMPINI, RubenBasic information
Original name
Art from the Borders? Wolfgang Fritz Volbach and the Localization of a Group of Early Christian Ivory Pyxides in the Caucasus
Name in Czech
Umění od hranic? Wolfgang Fritz Volbach a lokalizace skupiny pozdně antických slonovinových pyxid na Kavkaz
Authors
CAMPINI, Ruben (380 Italy, guarantor, belonging to the institution)
Edition
Turnhout, Re-Thinking Late Antique Armenia : Historiography, Material Culture, and Heritage, p. 152-167, 16 pp. Convivium Supplementum, 11, 2023
Publisher
Brepols
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Field of Study
60401 Arts, Art history
Country of publisher
Belgium
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Publication form
printed version "print"
References:
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14210/23:00130910
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
ISBN
978-80-280-0306-7
UT WoS
001004775500009
Keywords in English
Caucasus; Early Christian ivories; Ējmiatsin ivory diptych; Late Antiquity; Wolfgang Fritz Volbach
Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 12/3/2024 10:19, Alžběta Filipová, M.A., Ph.D.
Abstract
V originále
What was the thinking behind Wolfgang Fritz Volbach's attribution of a small group of Early Christian ivory pyxides to carvers active in the Caucasus? And does his hypothesis still hold up in the context of recent scholarship? By revisiting Volbach's attribution and its framing into the more general discussions about the localization of the production of late antique ivories that emerged since the second half of the nineteenth century, the present contribution wishes to re-address the question of the potential presence of sites of ivory carving in the Caucasus during Late Antiquity. Without definitive evidence supporting Volbach's proposal, the study of portable objects such as pyxides remains fundamental to de-marginalizing the role of Armenia and the Caucasus in the late antique Mediterranean interactions. Indeed, the finding of pyxides, ampullae, and censers in this area attests at least to their circulation and use, showing that they were not marginal spaces on the periphery of the eastern Roman world but, on the contrary, were actively engaged in its exchanges.
Links
GF21-01706L, research and development project |
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