Ut sophistes pictor: An Introduction to the Sophistic Contribution to Aesthetics

Author:

Guest Clare Lapraik1

Affiliation:

1. School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, London WC1E 7HU, UK

Abstract

This essay provides an introduction to the question of the contribution of the ancient sophists to aesthetics in Western art. It commences by examining the persistent analogies to visual arts in negative and positive discussions of sophistry, both philosophical and rhetorical, and proceeds to examine sophistic rhetoric in Gorgias, Aristides, Lucian, Philostratus and Byzantine ekphrasis, culminating with Philostratus’ discussions of mimesis and phantasia in Apollonius of Tyana. The discussions of the relation of being and nonbeing in Gorgias’ On Nonbeing and in Plato’s Sophist form the ontological core of sophistic claims about imaginative invention and the sophistic advancement of voluntary illusion (apatē) as a means to poetic “justice” or “truth”. Such claims should be considered in the light of the epistemological and ontological skepticism propounded by Gorgias. Although the opprobrium attached to sophistry obscures its later influence, we can nevertheless discern a sophistic aesthetic tradition focused on the reflective reception of artworks that re-emerges in the Renaissance. In the last section, I adumbrate the lines of study for examining a sophistic Renaissance in the visual arts, with attention to antiquarianism as an area where the significance of the beholder’s imaginative projection suggests the endurance—or revitalization—of sophistic aesthetics.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference82 articles.

1. Grayson, Cecil (1972). On Painting and Sculpture, Phaidon.

2. Allen, Michael (1989). Icastes: Marsilio Ficino’s Interpretation of Sophist, University of California Press.

3. Amato, Eugenio (2006). Approches de la Troisième Sophistique: Hommages à Jacques Schamp, Latomus.

4. Behr, C. (1973). Panathenaic Oration, Heinemann. Loeb Classical Library.

5. Forster, E. S. (1965). On Sophistical Refutations, Heinemann. Loeb Classical Library.

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