With the full panorama of her life forever lost, Cleopatra touches us  in a series of sensational images: floating through a perfumed mist down  the Nile; dressed as Venus for a tryst at Tarsus; unfurled from a roll  of linens before Caesar; couchant, the deadly asp clasped to her breast.  Through such images, each immortalizing the Egyptian queen's encounters  with legendary Romans--Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, and Octavian  Augustus--we might also chart her rendezvous with the destiny of Rome.  So Diana Kleiner shows us in this provocative book, which opens an  entirely new perspective on one of the most intriguing women who ever  lived. Cleopatra and Rome reveals how these iconic episodes, absorbed  into a larger historical and political narrative, document a momentous  cultural shift from the Hellenistic world to the Roman Empire. In this  story, Cleopatra's death was not an end but a beginning--a starting  point for a wide variety of appropriations by Augustus and his  contemporaries that established a paradigm for cultural conversion.
In this beautifully illustrated book, we experience the synthesis of  Cleopatra's and Rome's defining moments through surviving works of art  and other remnants of what was once an opulent material culture:  religious and official architecture, cult statuary, honorary  portraiture, villa paintings, tombstones, and coinage, but also the  theatrical display of clothing, perfume, and hair styled to perfection  for such ephemeral occasions as triumphal processions or barge cruises.  It is this visual culture that best chronicles Cleopatra's legend and  suggests her subtle but indelible mark on the art of imperial Rome at  the critical moment of its inception.
 
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