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EN
The following article concerns contemporary Polish music publishing houses, which in their offer have publications for children who start musical education during professional training. The author presents this area of Polish market in a synthetical way, as well as observes and analyzes tendencies which are visible there. Key market operators are mentioned with short descriptions of their publishing profile, preferred instruments and composers, editorial conditions etc. Few examples of publications are described in a more detailed way—i.e. publications from the offer of three publishing houses: Studio Bis, Crescendo and Euterpe. In the last case, the author interviewed Małgorzata Flis, the illustrator of this publishing house. All the examples are analyzed in an interdisciplinary, editorial-musicological way.
PL
Tematem artykułu jest działalność współczesnych polskich wydawnictw muzycznych, mających w swojej ofercie publikacje dedykowane dzieciom rozpoczynającym swoją edukację muzyczną. Autorka w syntetyczny sposób prezentuje ten obszar polskiego rynku, jak również obserwuje i analizuje obecne na nim tendencje. Wymienia także kluczowe wydawnictwa, prezentując krótko profil ich działalności, preferowane instrumenty, kompozytorów, warunki edytorskie itp., w sposób bardziej szczegółowy omawiając wybrane publikacje trzech domów wydawniczych: Studio Bis, Crescendo i Euterpe. W ostatnim przypadku autorka przeprowadziła wywiad z Małgorzatą Flis – ilustratorką wydawnictwa Euterpe. Wszystkie przykłady zostały zanalizowane w sposób interdyscyplinarny – zarówno ze strony edytorskiej, jak i muzykologicznej.
EN
This paper studies a collection of painted plaster fragments excavated between 1984 and 1989 in the northern part of the so-called House of Aion, that is, three small rooms (Nos 3, 13, 14, 15 and 7). The architectural context of these finds and their dating is first recapitulated: the house was constructed in the second half of the 4th century only to be demolished by a strong earthquake at the end of the century or the beginning of the following one. Most of the plaster pieces were small and of little significance in terms of the remaining colors, but a few from Room 7 were sufficiently well preserved to support a reconstruction of parts of five figural images (three muses, Apollo and a mask) and determine their hypothetical position in this room. Parallels, in painting and floor mosaics, range from Ephesos and Kos in the east to Vichen (Luxembourg) in the west. Based on the iIonographic identification, the 4th century AD Muses from Paphos could be recognized as: a standing Thalia holding a mask, a seated Urania and a standing Euterpe with a double flute in her hand, accompanied by Apollo holding a lyre. Together they constituted typical decoration of a Mediterranean Roman house, common from the early Empire through late antiquity.
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