"Agmine facto" : rampant rhetoric in Aeneid I

dc.contributor.authorShaw, R.W.
dc.date.accessioned2010-10-20T10:44:24Z
dc.date.available2010-10-20T10:44:24Z
dc.date.created2010-10
dc.date.issued2003
dc.descriptionArticle digitised using: Suprascan 1000 RGB scanner, scanned at 400 dpi; 24-bit colour; 100% Image derivating - Software used: Adobe Photoshop CS3 - Image levels, crop, deskew Abbyy Fine Reader No.9 - Image manipulation + OCR Adobe Acrobat 9 (PDF)en_US
dc.description.abstractThis article is the product of continued research in Vergil's pictorial imagery, a topic addressed earlier in a paper on the Laocoon episode of the Aeneid, which appeared in the 2001 edition of SAJAH. The poet's visual rhetoric seems to remove the barriers traditionally imposed on poetry and the literary arts, and his verbal palette contains all the descriptive elements indigenous to painting, cinema, and sculpture. The convoluted verse results in the strategic placement of words to convey visually the images in his narrative format. These observations remain the premise on which I have based my commentary on the first major event of the epic, the storm sequence of Bk i. A "catalogue raisonne" provides a survey of the art inspired by the passage dating from early Italian Renaissance through the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. There ensues a transposition of the exegesis to the author's visual interpretation in an attempt to mirror Vergil's painter-like and sculptural qualities in the genre of abstract expressionism and to evoke once again Horace's humanistic doctrine on poetry and the visual arts, "ut pictura poesis".en_US
dc.description.urihttp://explore.up.ac.za/record=b1719138en_US
dc.format.extent25 pagesen_US
dc.format.mediumPdfen_US
dc.identifier.citationShaw, RW 2003, 'Agmine facto: rampant rhetoric in Aeneid I.' South African Journal of Art History, vol. 18, pp. 124-148.en_US
dc.identifier.issn0258-3542
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/15048
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherArt Historical Work Group of South Africaen_US
dc.rightsArt Historical Work Group of South Africaen_US
dc.subjectArten_US
dc.subjectPoetryen_US
dc.subjectVirgil, 70-19 B.C.en_US
dc.subjectAbstract expressionismen_US
dc.subjectVisual rhetoric in poetryen_US
dc.subjectVisual abstraction in poetryen_US
dc.subjectVergil, 70-19 B.C.en_US
dc.subjectPublius Vergilius Maroen_US
dc.subject.lcshVirgil. Aeneis -- Criticism and interpretationen
dc.subject.lcshEpic poetry, Latin -- History and criticismen
dc.subject.lcshVisual poetryen
dc.title"Agmine facto" : rampant rhetoric in Aeneid Ien_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

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