'This book straddles intellectual history, art history, historiography, and classical studies to make a compelling case that ancient Greco-Roman viewers did perceive style as a meaningful part of the ancient pictorial vocabulary, and to demonstrate how. It is an erudite book, yet it wears its learning lightly. … The amount of scholarship that it distills and renders comprehensible is truly impressive.' Diliana Angelova, Associate Professor of Art History, University of California, Berkeley