Retrospective Columns

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A01=Samuel Holzman
Abacus
Acropolis
Aegean
Aetolian
Agora
Ancient
Apollo
Archaeological
Archaeological museum
Archaic
Archaistic
Architects
Architectural
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Architecture
Aristaineta
Aristaineta monument
Artemis
Artemis ephesos
Athena
Athena nike
Athena trecheia
Athenian
Athenian agora
Attic
Attic style
Attica
Author_Samuel Holzman
Bicolumnar
Bilingual
Block
Bolster
Builders
Buildings
Capitals
Carvers
Category=AMX
Century
Classical
Colonnade
Columns
Concave
Concave faces
Concave surfaces
Concave volutes
Construction
Contrast
Convex
Convex faces
Convex volutes
Corner
Corner palmettes
Cult
Cult statue
Dart
Decoration
Delos
Delphi
Design
Dionysos
Doric
Drums
Echinus
Egg dart
Elements
Ephesos
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Erechtheion
Eretria
Eye
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Faces
Flutes
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Goddess
Greek
Helix
Hellenistic
Inscription
Interior
Ionia
Ionian
Ionic
Ionic architecture
Ionic building
Ionic monuments
Ionic temple
Island marble
Itinerant
Itinerant temple
Jeraka
Jeraka capitals
Le roy
Limestone
Marble
Monument
Naxians
Neapolis
Nieborow
Nieborow capital
Nike
Opposite
Oropos
Paint
Pallene
Palmettes
Parthenos
Patron
Pattern
Pheia
Pheia capital
Porch
Propylon
Reconstruction
Relief
Roman
Sanctuary
Scale
Sculptural
Selinous
Shadow
Statue
Stavro
Stavro jeraka
Stoa
Stone
Stone carvers
Structure
Style
Surface
Temple
Thasos
Visual
Volute
Votive

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691262550
  • Dimensions: 191 x 267mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An innovative study of how and why ancient Greek builders sometimes combined older and contemporary carving styles when making capitals

The Ionic order of ancient Greek architecture gradually evolved over the course of the sixth century BCE. In Retrospective Columns, Samuel Holzman examines an overlooked group of nine Ionic monuments that are varied in design but have capitals that combine the pillowy, convex volutes of sixth-century Ionia on one side and the crisp concave volutes of more contemporary styles on the other. Such hybrid capitals had a surprising longevity and range, spanning Greece, Italy, and Turkey between 550 and 250 BCE.

Why did ancient Greek builders sometimes revert to older carving styles and combine them with newer ones? One old theory is that outdated styles were a labor-saving shortcut—a notion Holzman puts to rest with a marble carving experiment that recreated the volutes of one capital. Rather, he argues that hybrid capitals represented an important parallel to other trends in Greek art, notably “bilingual” Attic vases, which combined older and newer painting techniques for sheer visual delight. By studying the chiaroscuro carving effects and painted polychrome decoration of Ionic architecture, Holzman shows that ancient viewers were primed to look for differences in such details, which the book illustrates with many original drawings and diagrams.

Exploring works of Ionic architecture from different periods in Ionia, the Cyclades, Athens, and the Northern Aegean, Retrospective Columns demonstrates that their builders ultimately returned to outmoded elements to establish continuity with the past, reinforcing community identities and architectural tradition.

Samuel Holzman is assistant professor of Greek architectural history in the Department of Art & Archaeology and the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies at Princeton University. He leads the architectural research team of American Excavations Samothrace.

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