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ekphrasis
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ekphrasis

Vivid literary description of a work of art, a popular rhetorical exercise in late Antiquity. Several were written by the Greek writer Lucian. These, in particular his descriptions of Apelles' Calumny and Zeuxis' Centaur Family, were influential in the Renaissance as the only surviving evidence of ancient paintings. On the basis of these descriptions, artists such as Botticelli, Mantegna, and Albrecht Dürer tried to recreate the works of art.



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Hardy, Clara Shaw 1995 Ecphrasis and the Male Narrator in Ovid's Arachne.
What he does describe in detail is the inspiration for the deed, and this takes the form of an ecphrasis of the paintings in the woman's bedchamber.
Another term one often hears bruited about lately is ecphrasis.
 
 
 
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