2012
DOI: 10.1017/s0068113x12000190
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‘Singing Stones’: Contexting Body-Language in Romano-British Iconography

Abstract: Two stone sculptures from Caerwent — a disembodied human head and a seated female figure — are the focus of this article. Using icon-theory, it is proposed that the Caerwent sculptures (albeit recovered from different chronological horizons) were perhaps produced at the same time, maybe even by a single stonemason. Issues of materiality, including choice of stone and style, are seen as key to their understanding, in terms of Silurian identity and religion. Moreover, the emphasis on mouths and ears invites inte… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
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