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POLYGNOTUS

Volume 18 · 215 words · 1860 Edition

a famous painter of Thasos, flourished about 422 years before the Christian era, and was the son and scholar of Aglaophon. He adorned one of the public porticos of Athens with his paintings, in which he had represented the most striking events of the Trojan war. The Athenians were so pleased with him that they offered to reward his labours with whatever he pleased to accept, but he declined the offer; and the Amphictyonic Council, which was composed of the representatives of the principal cities of Greece, ordered that Polygnotus should be maintained at the public expense wherever he went. Of the talents of Polygnotus much honourable mention is made by many of the best authors of antiquity,—as Aristotle and Plutarch, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Pliny, and others. Pausanias speaks of his pictures of the events of the Trojan war, and in his tenth book introduces a long description of other pictures by the same artist, painted also from Homer, in the temple at Delphi. The passage, however, gives but a confused and imperfect idea of the painter's performance. How much the art is indebted to this ancient master, what grace and softness he gave to the human countenance, what embellishments he added to the female figure and dress, are much more happily described by Pliny.