This is the final volume in Brunilde Sismondo Ridgways series of books covering the entire range of Greek sculpture, from its inception to its virtual end as it merged into the production of the Roman Imperial world. Volume III discusses sculptural works, both architectural and free-standing, from approximately 100 B.C. to the Battle of Actium (31 B.C.), which removed from power the last Hellenistic ruler. Although some monuments may belong to the years just before or just after this timespan, Ridgways aim is to concentrate on works plausibly dated to the first century B.C., even those with highly controversial chronologies.
Famous sculpturesthe Laokoon, the epic groups from the Sperlonga cave, the Belvedere Torso, the bronze Boxer in the Terme Museum, and many othersare discussed together with less well known pieces. Ridgway gives special emphasis to the finds from two shipwrecksthe Mahdia and the Antikythera wrecksthat provide a reasonable terminus ante quem, and argues that many of the stylistic trends and decorative objects usually considered typically Roman instead have their roots in the Greek world. This last Hellenistic phase is perhaps the most interesting of the three because it documents, to a great extent, the transformation of the products of one culture into those of another with different interests and priorities. Far from being an unimaginative, inferior output driven by commercial considerations, the statuary of the first century B.C. is vibrant and inventive, drawing from many sources in a stylistic eclecticism.
"There are no other authors who present complex theories and often little-known evidence with such clarity and enthusiasm. Throughout the book Ridgways themes are reinforced. One of the most important of thesethat styles persist once they have been introducedmust now be built into all future scholarship on Greek sculpture."Carol Mattusch, George Mason University
