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images by
J. Martin Pitts
1989
80pp
285 x 190mm (11.2 x 7.5in)
£65
220 copies, signed by the artist
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Perched on a cliff that towers a thousand windy feet above the
southern Aegean stood the ancient city of Thera. First among the
sanctuaries and temples of the city was that of Apollo Karneios
and in the middle of the month Karneios (August-September) the
Karneia took place - the solemn and important festival introduced
from Sparta. At the height of the festivities and when the moon
was full, were the Gymnopaediae. On a specially dedicated square,
close by the cliff edge, and watched by the citizens (some of
whom were moved to express their feelings in graffiti which are
still visible in the stones) naked boys danced and sang paeans
to the patron of the palaestra, Apollo Kourotrophos, Apollo the
'boy-raiser'. The beauty of movement and form that would have
been seen on these occasions is here imagined by Martin Pitts
in a swirling sequence of linocut images.
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