TY - BOOK AU - Padgett,J.Michael AU - Childs,William A.P. AU - Tsiaphakē,D.S. ED - Princeton University. ED - Museum of Fine Arts, Houston TI - The centaur's smile: : the human animal in early Greek art SN - 0300101635 AV - N7760 .P25 2003 PY - 2003///] CY - Princeton, NJ. PB - Princeton University Art Museum; KW - Mythology, Classical, in art KW - fast KW - Themes, motives KW - Art, Ancient KW - Art, Greek KW - Animals, Mythical, in art KW - Greece N1 - Published on the occasion of an exhibition held at Princeton University Art Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in 2003-2004. With contributions by William A.P. Childs, Despoina Tsiafakis, et al; Includes bibliographical references (p. 365-395) and index N2 - 'Human animals--centaurs, satyrs, sphinxes, sirens, and Gorgons--as well as other composite beings like Pan, Triton, Acheloos, and the Minotaur, are extremely common in Greek myth, literature, theater, and the visual arts. Understanding the phenomenon of combining human and animal elements into composite creatures is central to our knowledge of the Greek imagination. This landmark book is the first to investigate representations of these human animals in early Greek art (ca. 750-450 B.C.). The Centaur's Smile discusses the Oriental antecedents of these fantastic creatures, examining the influence of Egyptian and Near Eastern models on the formation of Greek monsters in the Geometric and Archaic periods.' ER -