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And yet they say that once on a time when Agatharchus the painter was boasting loudly of the speed and ease with which he made his figures, Zeuxis heard him, and said, “Mine take, and last, a long time.”

Agatharchus or Agatharch ([Ancient Greek]: Ἀγάθαρχος) was a self-taught painter from Samos[1] who lived in the 5th century BC.[2] He is said by Vitruvius to have invented scene-painting, and to have painted a scene (scenam fecit) for a tragedy which Aeschylus exhibited.[3] Hence some writers, such as Karl Woermann, have supposed that he introduced perspective and illusion into painting.[4]

However, as this appears to contradict Aristotle's assertion that scene-painting was introduced by Sophocles,[5] some scholars understand Vitruvius to mean merely that Agatharchus constructed a stage.[6] But the context shows clearly that perspective painting must be meant, for Vitruvius goes on to say that Democritus and Anaxagoras, carrying out the principles laid down in a treatise written by Agatharchus,[7] wrote on the same subject, showing how, in drawing, the lines ought to be made to correspond, according to a natural proportion, to the figure which would be traced out on an imaginary intervening plane by a pencil of rays proceeding from the eye, as a fixed point of sight, to the several points of the object viewed.

It was probably not till towards the end of Aeschylus's career that scene-painting was introduced, and not till the time of Sophocles that it was generally made use of; which may account for what Aristotle says.[8]

Agatharchus was therefore the first painter known to have used graphical perspective on a large scale, although rare occurrences of perspective do appear in vase painting around the middle of the 6th century BC.[7] He is also said to have led the way for later painters, such as Apollodorus.[9]

He was a contemporary of Alcibiades and Zeuxis, and was often singled out for the ease and rapidity with which he finished his works.[10] Plutarch and Andocides at greater length tell an anecdote of Alcibiades having inveigled Agatharchus to his house and kept him there for more than three months in strict durance, compelling him to paint it.[11] The speech of Andocides above referred to seems to have been delivered after the destruction of Melos (416 BC) and before the expedition to Sicily (415 BC); so that from the above data the age of Agatharchus may be accurately fixed.[8]


References

Up through the 19th century, some scholars considered him to have been Athenian.
Donaldson, John William (1836). The Theatre of the Greeks. Pitt Press. p. 280.
Vitruvius, Praef. ad lib. vii
One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Agatharchus". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 370.
Aristotle, Poetics 4. § i 6
Compare Horace, Epistula ad Pisones 279: et modicis instravit pulpita tignis
Arafat, Karim W. (1996). "Agatharchus". In Hornblower, Simon. Oxford Classical Dictionary. 1. Oxford. p. 36.
Mason, Charles Peter (1867). "Agatharchus (2)". In Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 1. Boston. pp. 61–62.
Mahaffy, John Pentland (1902). Social Life in Greece from Homer to Menander. London: Macmillan & Co. p. 476.
Plutarch, Pericles 13

Plutarch, Alcibiades 16

Sources
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). "article name needed". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.

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