Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T14:09:23.398Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fantasising Phryne: The psychology and ethics of ekphrasis*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2012

Helen Morales
Affiliation:
University of California, Santa Barbara

Extract

      ‘It's such a pity that we don't have
      Anything like a photograph
      Of her about whom the ancients rave …’
      Fragments, copies, our museums still hold
      Of statues she modelled, or so we're told

(from Phryne by Robert Conquest, 2000)

Phryne, the celebrity hetaira who is said to have lived and loved some time during the fourth century BCE, was reputed to be ‘by far the most phenomenal of the hetairai’ (ἐπιφανεστάτη πολὺ τῶν ἑταίρων). This article aims to examine the anecdotes told about Phryne and argues that collectively they constitute a discourse on viewing that illuminates a significant aspect of the production and interpretation of art: the ethical and aesthetic problems involved (for the artist, subject, model and other viewers) in making and describing naturalistic art, especially that which represents the gods. A rich repertoire of written material on Phryne, and on the statue of the Aphrodite of Cnidus for which she was said to have been the model, has survived, although mostly by later rather than contemporary writers. Among the descriptions of the statue there is a group of epigrams collected in the Greek Anthology whose authorship and dating are largely uncertain. On Phryne we have accounts and imaginative scenarios in Alciphron, Lucian and Pausanias, all presumed to be writing in the second century CE; Athenaeus, who most probably wrote in the third century CE; and quotations from earlier writers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s). Published online by Cambridge University Press 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

WORKS CITED

Ajootian, A. (2007) ‘Praxiteles and fourth-century Athenian portraiture’, in Schultz, P., von den Hoff, R. (eds.) Early Hellenistic portraiture: image, style, context, Cambridge, 1333.Google Scholar
Bartsch, S., Elsner, J. (eds.) (2007a) Essays on ekphrasis = special issue of CPh 102.Google Scholar
Bartsch, S., Elsner, J. (2007b) ‘Introduction: eight ways of looking at an ekphrasis’ in (id.) (eds.) Essays on ekphrasis = special issue of CPh 102, i–vi.Google Scholar
Bettini, M. (1999) The portrait of the lover, transl. by Gibbs, Laura, Berkeley, Calif.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyle, A. J. 2003. Ovid and the monuments: A poet's Rome, Victoria, Australia.Google Scholar
Breed, B. W. (2003) ‘Portrait of a lady’, CJ 99.1, 3556.Google Scholar
Cameron, A. (1990) ‘Two mistresses of Ptolemy Philadelphus’, GRBS 31.3, 287311.Google Scholar
Cooper, C. (1995) ‘Hyperides and the trial of Phryne’, Phoenix 49, 303–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Ambra, E. (1996) ‘The calculus of Venus: nude portraits of Roman matrons’ in Kampen, N. (ed.) Sexuality in ancient art, Cambridge, 219–32.Google Scholar
Davidson, J. (2006) ‘Making a spectacle of her(self): the Greek courtesan and the art of the present’, in Feldman, M., Gordon, B., (eds.) The courtesan's arts: cross-cultural perspectives, Oxford, 2951.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Angelis, F. (2005) ‘L'Elena di Zeusi a Capo Lacinio Aneddoti e Storia’, Rend. Mor. Acc. Lincei. 9.16, 151200.Google Scholar
duBois, P. (2007) ‘Reading the writing on the wall’, in Bartsch, S., Elsner, J. (eds.) (2007a), 4556.Google Scholar
Egger, B. (1994) ‘Looking at Chariton's Callirhoe’ in Morgan, J., Stoneman, R. (eds.) Greek fiction: the Greek novel in context, London, 3148.Google Scholar
Elsner, J. (1995) Art and the Roman viewer: the transformation of art from the pagan world to Christianity, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Elsner, J. (ed.) (2002a) ‘Introduction: the genres of ekphrasis’, in Morgan, J., Stoneman, R. (ed.) (2002b)Google Scholar
Elsner, J. (2002b) The verbal and the visual: cultures of ekphrasis in antiquity = special volume of Ramus, 31.1 and 2, Victoria, Australia, 118.Google Scholar
Elsner, J. (2007) Roman eyes: visuality and subjectivity in art and text, Princeton, NJ.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elsom, H. (1992) ‘Callirhoe: displaying the phallic woman’ in Richlin, A. (ed.) Pornography and representation in Greece and Rome, Oxford, 212–30.Google Scholar
Engels, J. (1993) Studien zur politischen Biographie des Hypereides, Quellen und Forschungen zur antiken Welt, Munich.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2001) ‘The erotic eye: visual stimulation and cultural conflict’, in Richlin, A. (ed.) Being Greek under Rome: cultural identity, the Second Sophistic and the development of empire, Cambridge, 154–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldhill, S. D. (2007b) ‘What is ekphrasis for?’ in Bartsch, S., Elsner, J. (eds.) (2007a), 119.Google Scholar
Gordon, R. L. (1979) ‘The real and the imaginary: production and religion in the Greco-Roman World’, Art History 2.1, 534.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gow, A. S. F. and Page, D. L. (1965) The Greek Anthology: Hellenistic epigrams, vol 1, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gow, A. S. F. and Page, D. L. (1968) The Greek Anthology: The Garland of Philip and some contemporary epigrams, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2004) ‘Gender and the inscribed epigram: Herennia Procula and the Thespian eros’, TAPhA, 383418.Google Scholar
Havelock, C. (1995) The Aphrodite of Cnidos and her successors, Ann Arbor.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Havelock, C. (2005) The Roman nude: heroic portrait statuary 200 B.C. -A.D. 300. Oxford.Google Scholar
Heiserman, A. (1977) The novel before the novel. Essays and discussions about the beginnings of prose fiction in the West, Chicago and London.Google Scholar
J. G. W., Henderson (2002) Pliny's statue: the letters, self-portraiture and Classical art, Exeter.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. L. (1994) ‘History and historicity in the romance of Chariton’, ANRW 2.34.2, 1055–86.Google Scholar
Jax, K. (1933) Die weibliche Schönheit in der griechischen Dichtung, Innsbruck.Google Scholar
Keesling, C. (2006) ‘Heavenly bodies: monuments to prostitutes in Greek sanctuaries’, in Faraone, C. A., McClure, L. K. (eds.) Prostitutes and courtesans in the ancient world, Madison, Wis., 5976.Google Scholar
König, J. (2007) ‘Alciphron's epistolarity’, in Morello, R., Morrison, A. D. (eds.) Ancient letters: classical and late antique epistolography, Oxford, 257–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Love, I. C. (1972) ‘A preliminary report on the excavations at Knidos, 1972’, AJA 76.1, 6176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Love, I. C. (1973) ‘A preliminary report on the excavations at Knidos, 1973' AJA 77.4, 413–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mansfield, E. C. (2007) Too beautiful to picture: Zeuxis, myth, and mimesis, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
McClure, L. K. (2003) Courtesans at table: gender and Greek literaru culture in Athenaeus, London and New York.Google Scholar
Morales, H. L. (1996) ‘The torturer's apprentice: Parrhasius and the limits of art’, in Elsner, J. (ed.) Art and text in Roman culture, Cambridge, 182209.Google Scholar
Morales, H. L. (2004) Vision and narrative in Achilles Tatius' ‘Leucippe and Clitophon’, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nasrallah, L. S. (2010) Christian responses to Roman art and architecture: the second-century church amid the spaces of empire, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ogden, D. (1999) Polygamy, prostitutes and death: the Hellenistic dynasties, London.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. (1998) Archaic and Classical Greek art, Oxford.Google Scholar
Papet, E. (2007) ‘Phryné au XIXe siècle: la plus jolie femme de Paris?’, in Pasquier, and Martinez, (eds.), 262393.Google Scholar
Parker, R. (1996) Athenian religion: a history, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pasquier, A. (2007) ‘Les Aphrodites de Praxitèle’, in Pasquier, and Martinez, (eds.), 130201.Google Scholar
Pasquier, A. and Martinez, J-L. (2007) (eds.) Praxitèle, Paris.Google Scholar
Perry, E. (2005) The aesthetics of emulation in the visual arts of ancient Rome, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pirenne-Delforge, V. (1994) L'phrodite grecque. Contribution à l'étude de ses cultes et de sa personnalité dans le panthéon archaïque et classique, Kernos, suppl. 4, Athens and Liege.Google Scholar
Platt, V. (2002) ‘Evasive epiphanies in ekphrastic epigram’, in Elsner, J., (ed.) (2002b), 3350.Google Scholar
Raubitschek, A. E. (1941) ‘Phryne’, RE 20.1, 893907.Google Scholar
Rosenmeyer, P. (2001a) Ancient epistolary fictions. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Rosenmeyer, P. (2001b.) ‘(In)versions of Pygmalion: the statue talks Back’ in Lardinois, A., McClure, L. (eds.) Making silence speak: women's voices in ancient Greek literature and society, Princeton, NJ, 240–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitz, T. A. (2004) ‘Alciphron's Letters as a sophistic text’, in Borg, B. E (ed.) Paideia: the world of the Second Sophistic, Leiden, 87104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scholl, A. (1994) ‘Polutalanta mnemeia: zur literarischen und monumentalen Überlieferung aufwendigen Grabmaler im spätklassischen Athen’, JDAI 109, 239–71.Google Scholar
Scott, K. (1938) ‘Ruler cult and related problems in the Greek romances’, CPh 33, 380–89.Google Scholar
Semenov, A. (1935) ‘Hyperides und Phryne’, Klio 28, 271–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spivey, N. (1995) ‘Bionic statues’, in Powell, A. (ed.) The Greek world, London and New York, 442462.Google Scholar
Squire, M. (2011) ‘Reading a view: poem and picture in the Greek anthology’, in Ramus 39.2, 73103.Google Scholar
Steiner, D. (2001) Images in mind: statues in archaic and Classical Greek literature and thought, Princeton, NJ.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, W. (2010) The real real thing: the model in the mirror of art, Chicago.Google Scholar
Versnel, H. S. (1990) Ter unus, Studies in Greek and Roman Religion 6, Leiden.Google Scholar
Vout, C. (2007) Power and eroticism in imperial Rome, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Webb, R. (1997) ‘Imagination and the arousal of the emotions in Greco-Roman rhetoric’, in Braund, S. M., Gill, C. (eds.) The passions in Roman thought and literature, 112–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitehorne, J. E. G. (1975) ‘Golden Statutes in Greek and Latin Literature’, Greece and Rome 22, 109–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitmarsh, T. (2002) ‘Written on the body: ecphrasis, perception and deception in Heliodorus' Aethiopica’, in Elsner, J. (ed.) (2002b), 111–25.Google Scholar
Zeitlin, F. I. (2003) ‘Living portraits and sculpted bodies in Chariton's theater of romance’, in Panayotakis, S., Zimmerman, M., Keulen, W. (eds.) The ancient novel and beyond, Leiden/Boston, 7184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar