What makes Neer’s approach compelling is his insistence that Greek art is not a static canon but a dynamic set of practices shaped by interactions—between Greeks and non-Greeks, elites and communities, ritual and daily life. He foregrounds moments when imagery negotiates meaning: the ways mythic scenes on vases could reinforce civic identity or, conversely, expose anxieties about difference; how public sculpture asserted authority while also enabling local variations; and how visual forms migrated across the Mediterranean, absorbing and transforming foreign motifs.