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Keywords = Greek theatre

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12 pages, 4569 KiB  
Article
The Acoustic Characteristics of Hellenistic Morgantina Theatre in Modern Use
by Giovanni Amadasi, Antonella Bevilacqua, Gino Iannace and Amelia Trematerra
Acoustics 2023, 5(3), 870-881; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics5030050 - 15 Sep 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3680
Abstract
Thousands of theatres were built during the Hellenistic period in Greece and overseas colonies. The main elements of the Hellenistic theatre are the following: the orchestra, where music and songs were performed to accompany the acting performance, and the koilon, where the audience [...] Read more.
Thousands of theatres were built during the Hellenistic period in Greece and overseas colonies. The main elements of the Hellenistic theatre are the following: the orchestra, where music and songs were performed to accompany the acting performance, and the koilon, where the audience sat. Hellenistic theatres were built without any ceiling, with an open-air configuration. This paper reports the acoustic characteristics of the Greek (Hellenistic) theatre located in Morgantina (Sicily, Italy) based on the technical data gathered in different listening positions selected across the sitting area (koilon). The theatre of Morgantina was built in the third century BC and renovated a few decades ago. Nowadays, it is the center of important social and cultural activities. The outcomes of the beamforming technique employed for the survey have been discussed in comparison with traditional acoustic parameters, such as ISO 3382. The scope of this article is to assess the usability of this theatre intended to be used for different types of artistic performances. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Historical Acoustics)
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6 pages, 2184 KiB  
Proceeding Paper
Local Climate Pressure on Cultural Heritage Sites—The Case of the Ancient Greek Theatre of Dodoni, Epirus, Greece
by Marina Panagiota P. Nastou and Stelios C. Zerefos
Environ. Sci. Proc. 2023, 26(1), 127; https://doi.org/10.3390/environsciproc2023026127 - 29 Aug 2023
Viewed by 875
Abstract
Climate change is an ongoing process with evident effects on local climates. Heritage management is vital for the protection of cultural heritage, with vulnerability assessment and mitigation-adaptation strategies. This research presents the pressure of local climate and the climate extremes on the ancient [...] Read more.
Climate change is an ongoing process with evident effects on local climates. Heritage management is vital for the protection of cultural heritage, with vulnerability assessment and mitigation-adaptation strategies. This research presents the pressure of local climate and the climate extremes on the ancient Greek theatre of Dodoni in North-Western Greece, which combines cultural, natural, tangible, and intangible heritage. The impact of local climate is analyzed by collecting climatological daily time series of ambient air temperature, humidity, and precipitation, acquired by the nearby meteorological station of Ioannina (Hellenic National Meteorological Service) for the period 1956–2022. This information is incorporated into heritage management for future protection. Full article
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14 pages, 6111 KiB  
Article
Rediscovering the Intangible Heritage of Past Performative Spaces: Interaction between Acoustics, Performance, and Architecture
by Angela Bellia and Antonella Bevilacqua
Heritage 2023, 6(1), 319-332; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage6010016 - 29 Dec 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3067
Abstract
The relationship between the shape and social use of Greek and Roman theatres has always been overshadowed by the technical and acoustic analyses of these performance spaces. Relevant ruins illustrate the relationship between performance typology, acoustics, and construction development of ancient theatres, which [...] Read more.
The relationship between the shape and social use of Greek and Roman theatres has always been overshadowed by the technical and acoustic analyses of these performance spaces. Relevant ruins illustrate the relationship between performance typology, acoustics, and construction development of ancient theatres, which were mainly determined by the requirements of artistic venues. The music in tragedies and comedies, the dances, and the public speeches performed in the same places helped to shape the constructions according to the requirements of the events. In addition to the need to satisfy social and political interactions, the functions of musical performances and public speeches in theatres were maintained across generations so that they organically coexisted in both Greek and Roman times. This paper presents new insights into the relationships between sound and architecture, focusing on the case study of the Greek–Roman theatre of Katane and its evolution through the centuries. Architectural features have been described in terms of the social functions of the theatre rather than as mere results of geometric rules. A brief comparison with the neighboring odeion of Katane and other Greek–Roman theatres has been made regarding destination use. Full article
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13 pages, 4874 KiB  
Article
The Politics of Seeing Double: Klaus Michael Grüber’s Die Bakchen and the Visual Arts
by Irene Gerogianni
Arts 2022, 11(6), 119; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts11060119 - 24 Nov 2022
Viewed by 2746
Abstract
Euripides’ The Bacchae is a Greek tragedy that relies on its capacity to give double vision, by confusing and dismembering the senses. This idea of doubling is taken to the extreme in the Berlin Schaubühne production Die Bakchen, directed by Klaus Michael [...] Read more.
Euripides’ The Bacchae is a Greek tragedy that relies on its capacity to give double vision, by confusing and dismembering the senses. This idea of doubling is taken to the extreme in the Berlin Schaubühne production Die Bakchen, directed by Klaus Michael Grüber in 1974, which formed part of the Antikenprojekt, realized along with Peter Stein. For theatre historians, Grüber’s Die Bakchen delivered a completely new concept of theatre—a theatre of images—capable to bewitch and fascinate the spectators, but distant from a hermeneutic approach with reference to the dramatic text. What is often missed here, however, is the specificity of the visual aspect of the production, which features references to historical works of classical and Renaissance art, as well as to modern sculpture, Arte Povera and conceptual, as well as performance, art pieces. In fact, the idea of doubling seems to be translated by Grüber into an intertextual, intermedial play between the text, the performance on stage, and the visual arts. As a result, the different aspects of the production look familiar and unfamiliar at the same time, not merely by the uneasy separation of theatre and text, but also by the double’s interplay between vision and knowledge. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Art and Performance)
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7 pages, 3879 KiB  
Communication
Doric Foot and Metrological Implications of the Ancient Theatre of Makyneia, Western Greece
by Stathis C. Stiros
Metrology 2022, 2(3), 387-393; https://doi.org/10.3390/metrology2030023 - 19 Aug 2022
Viewed by 2553
Abstract
Understanding the length and subdivisions of ancient length units is necessary for Archaeology, Architecture, and engineering, among other fields. These metrological units derive from anthropocentric concepts (fathom, cubit, foot, finger, etc.) and hence their metrological characteristics are variable and unknown for various ancient [...] Read more.
Understanding the length and subdivisions of ancient length units is necessary for Archaeology, Architecture, and engineering, among other fields. These metrological units derive from anthropocentric concepts (fathom, cubit, foot, finger, etc.) and hence their metrological characteristics are variable and unknown for various ancient civilizations. The Roman length units are well determined, but the ancient Greek units are not. A rule sculpted in a metrological relief recently permitted the recognition of the Doric foot as having a length of 327 mm, but the broader use and divisions of this length unit remain unknown. In this article we present evidence of use of the Doric foot from the modeling of an ancient, atypical small theatre of the 4th–3rd century B.C., at Makyneia, on the western Greece mainland. It was found that this structure was designed using the Doric foot and its division in 24 (or even 12) digits. This result from a small provincial town indicates that the Doric foot was in broad use in architectural and engineering works of the ancient Greek World, and this result may be used to solve various problems of that era. Full article
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14 pages, 7734 KiB  
Article
Papier-Mâché Puppets’ Characterization by Infrared Imaging Techniques
by Sofia Ceccarelli, Erika Cao, Noemi Orazi, Cristina Cicero, Fulvio Mercuri, Ugo Zammit, Alessandra Terrei and Stefano Paoloni
Heritage 2022, 5(3), 1419-1432; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5030074 - 24 Jun 2022
Viewed by 2736
Abstract
Among the different forms of art, the puppet theatre constitutes a long-standing and often little-known tradition. The use of puppets as support for acting dates back to the Greek age, and it was mainly developed during the modern period. The reason for such [...] Read more.
Among the different forms of art, the puppet theatre constitutes a long-standing and often little-known tradition. The use of puppets as support for acting dates back to the Greek age, and it was mainly developed during the modern period. The reason for such a large diffusion was due to the possibility of using affordable materials, such as papier-mâché, for the puppets’ manufacture. In this paper, a method based on the combined use of pulsed thermography (PT) and mid-wave infrared reflectography (MIR) is, for the first time, proposed for the characterization of papier-mâché artworks. In particular, some puppets belonging to the collection of the Museo delle Civiltà in Rome and made by Olga Lampe Minelli, a 20th-century puppet master, were investigated in order to detect damaged areas, such as those affected by insect attacks, and, consequently, to specifically plan suitable restoration works. Finally, the investigations were also carried out after the restoration to evaluate the effectiveness of the adopted treatments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Infrared Imaging Techniques for Heritage)
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19 pages, 4953 KiB  
Article
Virtual Sound Field of the Roman Theatre of Malaca
by Javier Alayón, Sara Girón, José A. Romero-Odero and Francisco J. Nieves
Acoustics 2021, 3(1), 78-96; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics3010008 - 14 Feb 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 4525
Abstract
In Hispania (present-day Spain and Portugal), there are 25 structures documented of classical Roman open-air theatres, of which 10 are in the south, in the Roman Baetica (Andalusia). The Baetica embraced the progress of urbanisation in the time of the Roman emperor Augustus, [...] Read more.
In Hispania (present-day Spain and Portugal), there are 25 structures documented of classical Roman open-air theatres, of which 10 are in the south, in the Roman Baetica (Andalusia). The Baetica embraced the progress of urbanisation in the time of the Roman emperor Augustus, where theatres, built in stone, were the foci of entertainment, performance, and propaganda of the empire. The Roman theatre in Malaga presents the archaeological remains of the main vestige of the Roman Malaca. It is located in the historical centre of the city, at the foot of the hill of the Muslim Alcazaba and was discovered in 1952. It is a medium-sized theatre whose design corresponds to a mixed construction that combines making use of the hillside for the terraces, in the manner of Greek theatres, with a major construction where rock is non-existent, thereby creating the necessary space for the stands. In this paper, the production process, adjustment, and validation of the 3D model of the theatre are analysed for the creation of a numerical predictive model of its sound field. Acoustic properties of the venue are examined and the effect of the Muslim Alcazaba and the hillside on the various acoustic descriptors is analysed. The results highlight the influence of this large stone surface mainly on the time decay parameters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Historical Acoustics)
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15 pages, 300 KiB  
Article
The Open Constructed Public Sphere: Aeschylus’ The Suppliant Women in a Version by David Greig
by Verónica Rodríguez
Humanities 2020, 9(1), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/h9010021 - 18 Feb 2020
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3603
Abstract
This article looks at the ‘public’ ‘place’ of drama in Britain at present by offering an analysis of a contemporary version of an ancient Greek play by Aeschylus, entitled The Suppliant Women, written by David Greig, directed by Ramin Gray, and first [...] Read more.
This article looks at the ‘public’ ‘place’ of drama in Britain at present by offering an analysis of a contemporary version of an ancient Greek play by Aeschylus, entitled The Suppliant Women, written by David Greig, directed by Ramin Gray, and first performed at the Royal Lyceum Theatre Edinburgh in 2016. Following an agonistic (Chantal Mouffe), rather than a consensual (Jürgen Habermas) model of the public sphere, it argues that under globalisation, three cumulative and interwoven senses of the public sphere, the discursive, the spatial, and the individual and his/her/their relation to a larger form of organisation, despite persisting hegemonic structures that perpetuate their containment, have become undone. This is the kind of unbounded model of public sphere Greig’s version of Aeschylus’ The Suppliant Women seems to suggest by precisely offering undoings of discourses, spaces, and individualisations. In order to frame the first kind of undoing, that is, the unmarking of theatre as contained, the article uses Christopher Balme’s notion of ‘open theatrical public sphere’, and in order to frame the second, that is, the undoing of elements ‘in’ Greig’s version, the article utilises Greig’s concept of ‘constructed space’. The article arrives then at the notion of the open constructed public sphere in relation to The Suppliant Women. By engaging with this porous model of the public sphere, The Suppliant Women enacts a protest against exclusionary, reductive models of exchange and organisation, political engagement, and belonging under globalisation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Public Place of Drama in Britain, 1968 to the Present Day)
17 pages, 2528 KiB  
Article
The Contribution of the Stage Design to the Acoustics of Ancient Greek Theatres
by Nikos Barkas
Acoustics 2019, 1(1), 337-353; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics1010018 - 23 Mar 2019
Cited by 19 | Viewed by 14481
Abstract
The famous acoustics of ancient Greek theatres rely on a successful combination of appropriate location and architectural design. The theatres of the ancient world effectively combine two contradictory requirements: large audience capacity and excellent aural and visual comfort. Despite serious alterations resulting from [...] Read more.
The famous acoustics of ancient Greek theatres rely on a successful combination of appropriate location and architectural design. The theatres of the ancient world effectively combine two contradictory requirements: large audience capacity and excellent aural and visual comfort. Despite serious alterations resulting from either Roman modifications or accumulated damage, most of these theatres are still theatrically and acoustically functional. Acoustic research has proven that ancient theatres are applications of a successful combination of the basic parameters governing the acoustic design of open-air venues: elimination of external noise, harmonious arrangement of the audience around the performing space, geometric functions among the various parts of the theatre, reinforcement of the direct sound through positive sound reflections, and suppression of the delayed sound reflections or reverberation. Specifically, regarding the acoustic contribution of the stage building, it is important to clarify the consecutive modifications of the skene in the various types of theatres, given the fact that stage buildings were almost destroyed in most ancient Greek theatres. This paper attempts to demonstrate the positive role of the scenery in contemporary performances of ancient drama to improve the acoustic comfort using data from a sample of twenty (20) ancient theatres in Greece. Full article
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5 pages, 50 KiB  
Article
Second Hand Smoke Exposure and Excess Heart Disease and Lung Cancer Mortality among Hospital Staff in Crete, Greece: A Case Study
by Constantine I. Vardavas, Izolde Mpouloukaki, Manolis Linardakis, Penelope Ntzilepi, Nikos Tzanakis and Anthony Kafatos
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2008, 5(3), 125-129; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph5030125 - 30 Sep 2008
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 11260
Abstract
Exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) is a serious threat to public health, and a significant cause of lung cancer and heart disease among non-smokers. Even though Greek hospitals have been declared smoke free since 2002, smoking is still evident. Keeping the above into [...] Read more.
Exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) is a serious threat to public health, and a significant cause of lung cancer and heart disease among non-smokers. Even though Greek hospitals have been declared smoke free since 2002, smoking is still evident. Keeping the above into account, the aim of this study was to quantify the levels of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and to estimate the attributed lifetime excess heart disease and lung cancer deaths per 1000 of the hospital staff, in a large Greek public hospital. Environmental airborne respirable suspended particles (RSP) of PM2.5 were performed and the personnel’s excess mortality risk was estimated using risk prediction formulas. Excluding the intensive care unit and the operating theatres, all wards and clinics were polluted with environmental tobacco smoke. Mean SHS-RSP measurements ranged from 11 to 1461 μg/m3 depending on the area. Open wards averaged 84 μg/m3 and the managing wards averaged 164 μg/m3 thus giving an excess lung cancer and heart disease of 1.12 (range 0.23-1.88) and 11.2 (range 2.3–18.8) personnel in wards and 2.35 (range 0.55-12.2) and 23.5 (range 5.5–122) of the managing staff per 1000 over a 40-year lifespan, respectively. Conclusively, SHS exposure in hospitals in Greece is prevalent and taking into account the excess heart disease and lung cancer mortality risk as also the immediate adverse health effects of SHS exposure, it is clear that proper implementation and enforcement of the legislation that bans smoking in hospitals is imperative to protect the health of patients and staff alike. Full article
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