Post on 13-Jul-2015
A first century A.D. life-size 61 in. [1.54 m.] marble statue copied
from a bronze statue originally done by the sculptor Myron of
Greece ca. 450 B.C
• Considered to be the center of the world. Delphi symbolically represents nature and man brought together between the sea and the hills. The temple of Apollo according to legend housed Apollo since 4 days after his birth, at which time he killed a serpent (representing the forces of nature) and claimed victory.
• The pathway to the temple of Apollo and on to the theater, begins at the lower end of the sanctuary, rises up the hillside crisscrossing past various structures and other artifacts or remnants of Greek city states. As a collection, the artifacts serve as representation of a democratic society.
• Delphi has been important as the sanctuary of gaia, the original goddess of the earth and fertility.
Greek and Roman Deities
• Most of the Greek deities were adopted by the Romans, although in many cases there was a change of name.
• According to the most widespread legend, twelve major sky gods and goddesses established themselves in patarial splendor on Mount Olympus in northern Greece after defeating the earth deities, called Giants or Titans, for control of the earth and sky.
Greek and Roman Deities
• Zeus (Jupiter), supreme deity, Mature, bearded man, holds scepter or lightning bolt; eagle and oak tree are sacred to him.
• Hera (Juno), goddess of marriage, Sister/Wife of Zeus, Mature; cow and peacock are sacred to her.
• Hestia (Vesta), goddess of the hearth, Sister of Zeus, Her sacred flame burned in communal hearths.
• Poseidon (Neptune), god of the sea. Holds a three pronged spear; horse is sacred to him.
• Hades (Pluto), god of the underworld, the dead, and wealth. His helmet makes the wearer invisible.
• The remaining seven sky gods, the offspring of the first five, are:
• Ares (Mars), god of war. Son of Zeus and Hera. Wears armor; vulture and dog are scared to him.
• Hephaistos (Vulcan), god of the forge, fire, and metal handicrafts. Son Hera (in some myths, also of Zeus); husband of Aphrodite. Lame sometimes ugly; wears blacksmith's apron, carries hammer.
• Apollo (Phoebus), god of the sun, light, truth, music, archery, and healing. Sometimes identified with Helios (the sun), who rides a chariot across the daytime sky. Son of Zeus and Leto (a descendant of earth); brother of Artemis. Carries bow and arrows or sometimes lyre; dolphin and laurel are sacred to him.
• Athena (Minerva), goddess of wisdom, war, victory the city, and civilization. Daughter of Zeus, sprang fully grown from his head. Wear helmet and carries shield and spear, owl and olive trees are sacred to her.
• Hermes (Mercury), messenger of he gods, god of fertility and luck, guide of the dead to ht eunderworld, and god of thieves, commerce, and the marketplace. Son of Zeus and Maia, the daughter of Atlas, a Giant who supports the sky on his shoulders. Wears winged sandals and hat; carries caduceus, a wind with two snakes entwined around it.
OTHER IMPORTANT DEITIES INCLUDE.
• Demeter (Ceres), goddess of grain and agriculture.• Persephone (Proserpina), goddess of fertility and queen of
the underworld. Wife of Hades; daughter of Demeter.• Dionysos (Bacchus), god of wine, the grape harvest, and
inspiration. Shown surrounded by grape vines and grape clusters; carries a wine cup. His female followers are called maenads (BACCHANTES)
• Eros (Cupid), god of love in some myths, the son of Aphrodite. Shown as an infant or young boy. Sometimes winged, carries bow and arrow.
• Pan, proctector of shepherds, god of the wilderness and of music. Half man, half goat, he carries pan pipes.
• Nike, goddess of victory. Often seen winged and flying.
The Lefkandi CentaurThis centaur from Lefkandi on Euboea is an important work of art for all sorts of reasons. It dates to the 10th century BC, and shows the typical geometric patterning of the time. But it also depicts the growing interest in depicting figures rather than simply designs, and shows an interest in mythology, which will provide the subject matter for much later Greek art. The centaur appears to be wounded in his left knee, indicating a mythological encounter with Heracles.
Funerary vase,
from the Dipylon
Cemetery,
Athens. c. 750
BCE. Terra-cotta,
height 42 5/8 "
(108 cm). The
Metropolitan
Museum of Art,
New York.
Man and Centaur,
perhaps from
Olympia. c. 750
BCE. Bronze,
height 4 5/16" (11.1
cm). The
Metropolitan
Museum of Art,
New York.
Plan of a Typical Greek Temple
The numbers below correspond to the circled numbers above. 1. Stereobate (or substructure).2. Stylobate.3. Colonnade (or peristyle).4. Porch (or pronaos).5. Cella (or naos).6. Rear porch (or opisthodomus).
The Greeks developed three architectural systems, called orders, each with their own distinctive proportions and detailing. The Greek orders are: Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian.
Doric
The Doric style is rather
sturdy and its top (the
capital), is plain. This
style was used in
mainland Greece and
the colonies in
southern Italy and
Sicily.
Ionic
The Ionic style is
thinner and more
elegant. Its capital is
decorated with a scroll-
like design (a volute).
This style was found in
eastern Greece and the
islands.
Corinthian
The Corinthian style is
seldom used in the
Greek world, but often
seen on Roman
temples. Its capital is
very elaborate and
decorated with
acanthus leaves.
Gorgon Medusa, detail of sculpture from the west pediment of the
Temple of Artemis, Korkyra. c. 580 BC. Limestone, height of pediment at
the center 9'2 " (2.79 m). Archaeological Museum, Korkyra (Corfu).
• As a female monster with snakes Medusa was one of the most typical examples of the Other in Greek culture. She epitomized the monstrous as being female and wild. The demonization of snakes here is particularly interesting. Comparison can be made between these images of Medusa and representations of the so-called Snake Goddess that come from Minoan art of the middle of the second millennium BC.
Reconstruction of the Siphnian Treasury using fragments found in the Sanctuary of Apollo, Delphi. c. 530–525 BC. Marble.
This frieze shows the Gigantomachy, a legendary battle in
Greek mythology between the Giants and the Olympian
gods. The gods won by killing the Giants with the help of
Hercules.
Dying Warrior, sculpture from the left corner of the east
pediment of the Temple of Aphaia, Aegina. c. 480 BCE.
Marble, length 6' (1.83 m).
• KOUROS (plural: KOUROI) =male youth
• KORE (plural: KORAI): female figure / related to the Egyptian idea of the queen as the goddess Hathor; also to Middle East representations of female deities
New York
Kouros from
Attica. c. 580
BCE. Marble,
height 6'4" (1.93
m). The
Metropolitan
Museum of Art,
New York.
Kore, from
Chios, c. 520
BCE.
Marble,
height 217/8"
(56.6 cm).
Acropolis
Museum,
Athens.
This kouros served as a
grave marker and was
accompanied by the
following inscription:
"Stand and pity beside the
grave monument of dead
Kroisos, whom, at one
time, while fighting in the
front ranks of battle,
raging Ares destroyed".
Peplos
Kore,
Athens,
c.530
BCE,
marble,
c.4’
Berlin Kore,
Cemetery at
Keretea,
near Athens.
C. 570-560
BC.
Marble with
ruminants of
red paint
6’ 3”
Amphora
Oval body with a vertical handle on either side. It was used for
storage of wine or sometimes oil. The name "Amphora" is from
the word "amphi" means on both sides and "phero" means to
bring.
Amphora is classified into "neck amphora", which has a offset
neck or "belly amphora", which has a continuous profile from the
lip to the foot. Former has some sub-categories: "nolan
amphora" with flaring mouth, "panathenaic amphora" a prize for
the winner of the game at the Panathenaic festival, "nikosthenic
amphora" derived from the Bucchero pottery, "pointed amphora"
with a knob at the bottom.
Amphora was produced from the beginning of the black-figure to
the end of the red-figure and became slender in later period.
Neck Amphora
Oval body, an offset neck with a thick mouth,
two vertical handles and a heavy stand.
Some geometric amphora have a decoration
"SOS" on either side of the neck. Black-figured
neck amphora usually has a lotus-palmette
pattern instead of "SOS" and figured scene on
the body.
Tyrrhenian amphora, made in the middle of
sixth century, has a tall body and the amphora
made by Exekias or other potter has a round
body, and later amphora has intermediate
shape.
Panathenaic Amphora
Broad body tapering sharply downward, an offset
neck with a heavy mouth, handles cylindrical in
section and a small stand.
It was used as a prize for the Panathenaic game
held every four years and olive oil harvested from
the trees in Academia was contained.
Figured scene is arranged on either side of the
body, Athena between the columns is on one side,
the game he won on the other.
The oldest example is about 560 B.C. and painted
by the black-figure in the age of the red-figure and
hellenistic period. Since the fourth century, the
name of Archon for the year was appeared by the
right hand column.
Hydria
Two horizontal handles at the sides,
used for lifting. The name "Hydria" is
from the word "hydor" means water.
It was produced from the beginning of
the black-figure, though early example
has a round body. Hydria with
continuous curve is called "Kalpis",
which was maybe introduced by the
red-figure workshop.
Figured scene is arranged on the body
and often on the shoulder.
Olpe
S shape profile from the flat lip to the foot
and a vertical handle. This shape is the
oldest oinochoe in the Attic black-figure
and produced from the beginning of it to
the end of the sixth century though there is
no example painted by the red-figure. It
was maybe developed into the "Oinochoe
type 5a" with thicker lip, since some late
olpe has a shape similar to the type 5.
The figured scene is arranged on the body
as a paneled picture.
Volute Krater Round body, an offset neck, a heavy stand
and two handles which is in the form of a
spiral with flanged sides rising from loops on
the shoulder to above to the rim. This shape
was introduced in the second quarter of the
sixth century, though the examples with the
black-figure are rare and flourished after the
end of the century. Workshops of Apulia, a
Greek colony in South Italy, favoured this
shape.
The form became slenderer as time went by
and Gorgoneia, masks of the Medusa, are
applied on the volutes of the handles in
Apulia. Figured scene is arranged on either
side of the body and sometimes on the neck.
Usually flower ornaments flourish the vase.
Dimensions: height about 70cm, though there
are many vases over 1m high in apulian
vases.
Calyx Krater
Deep body with the lower convex, the
upper slightly concave. A heavy stand
and handles which are set at the top of
the lower part, curve upward.
The first example was maybe produced
by Exekias in about 530B.C. In the age
of the red-figure, this shape was
favoured and used till the end of this
technique.
A frieze picture is arranged on the upper
part without a interruption by the
handles. A palmette pattern is usually
arranged on the lower part.
Bell KraterBell shaped body with loop handles
placed high on the body and curving
slightly upward and a heavy stand. Some
early example have not loop handles but
lugs.
This shape was introduced after the
beginning of the red-figure and especially
favoured after the middle of the fifth
century.
The figured scene is arranged on the
body and the ornament is very simple.
Standard Lekythos
Tall cylindrical body with an offset
shoulder, a tall neck with heavy
mouth, a vertical handle and heavy
stand and the diameter is largest on
the body.
This shape was introduced about the
late sixth century and white ground
lekythos used as a offering was
produced since the second quarter of
the fifth century, though disappeared
in the early fourth.
Figured scene is arranged on the
body and rarely on the shoulder,
where usually a five-palmette pattern
is preferred.
Oinochoe
Oval body with an offset neck, a trefoil
mouth and a high handle. This shape was
produced from the beginning of the black-
figure to slightly before the end of the red-
figure.
Normally, the ornament is only done on the
body, though there are some examples in
black-figure with a decoration on the neck.
Some late oinochoe have a white ground
body. Since this shape has a origin in the
bronze vessel, a relief ornament of human
head is attached on the connection
between the handle and the mouth. Red-
figured oinochoe usually has a panel on
the body and sometimes a palmette
pattern on the connection.
Kantharos
A deep bowl with a high vertical
handle on either side and a tall
stand. The word "Kantharos"
means dung beetle and it is maybe
used for this shape.
Kantharos was produced from the
beginning of the black-figure to the
end of the fifth century. However,
there are not so many example and
this shape is famous as a attribute
of Dionysos in the Greek vase
painting. There are some varieties:
with short stand, short handles, or
one handle. Some kantharoi in the
shape of the head of a woman,
Herakles or Satyrs were produced.
Kylix
"Kylix" is a drinking cup with a horizontal handle on either side and
used for wine. Its name seems to be applied to the cup in any shape.
The kylix has a frieze picture on the either side of the outside, and
another in inside, which is called "tondo".
There are many varieties in the cup and classified by the shape of the
lid, handle and stand. "Komast cup" has deep bowl and short stand.
"Siana cup" has taller stand. "Merrythought cup" has handles shaped
like a wishbone. "Little master cup" has a shallow bowl and a tall
stand. "Gordion cup" is a midway between the siana cup and the little
master cup.
"Kylix type A" has a broad stand and "kylix type B" has a continuous
curve from the lip to the foot. "Chalcidizing cup" has a short stand and
"Stemless cup" has no stand.
Komast Cup
A deep bowl with
concaved lip, short
horizontal handles and a
short stand. It was named
after komast, a drunk,
which preferred in this
shape.
It was made 590-570 B.C.
and developed into the
Siana cup. Figures are
depicted on the outside in
the frieze pictures. A flower
decoration is often depicted
on the lip.
Exekias (c. 550–525 BC)
Athenian - Greek potter and painter who was the
leading vase painter of the Attic School in the
archaic black-figured style, with the Amasis
Painter, is considered the finest of black-figure
masters of the mid-6th century BC and is one of
the major figures in the history of the art. His
name is found on 11 vases. The most common
inscription on the vases is “Exekias epoiesen me”
(“Exekias made me”).
Euphronios
• Euphronios was a vase-painter and potter working in the red-figure technique in Athens from about 520 to 470 B.C. He signed his name on eighteen vases, six times as painter and twelve times as potter. To judge by their drawing style, the vases that he signed as potter seem to be later than those he signed as painter.
In his early career Euphronios was one of a group of Athenian vase-painters who have been named the Pioneers by scholars today. Working about 520 to 500 B.C., they were the first to exploit the possibilities of drawing in the new red-figure technique.
Classical Period c. 480-323 BC.
• The art of the Classical Greek style is characterized by a joyous freedom of movement, freedom of expression, and it celebrates mankind as an independent entity (atomo). During this period, artists begin to expand the formal aesthetic boundaries while they worked in expressing the human figure in a more naturalistic manner. They were able to replace the strict asymmetry of the figure with a free flowing form more true to life, while they approached an ideal aesthetic vision through stone and bronze.
• 480 BC: Early Classical
• 430 - 370 BC: High Classical
• 430 - 323 BC: Late Classical
Terms and Vocabulary
• Acropolis: A large group of buildings situated above the normal city (as if on top a large hill) - literally translated into, "city above." The Parthenon is part of an acropolis.
• Amphora: A type of jar used by the Greeks to store various provisions such as corn, wine, oil, honey, etc… The opening is usually large enough to admit a ladle, and typically was covered with a lid. Amphora literally means, “to carry on both sides”, referring to the large handles placed to both sides of the neck.
• Barbarian: The etymology or origin of the word "barbarian" is derived from the sound of the language that the so-called barbarians' of ancient Europe spoke. The Persians were typically referred to as barbarians, given this name because their speech was interpreted by the Greeks as: "bar"-"bar."
• Canon: Used in Canon of Proportions: an idealized mathematical system for depictions of the human body.
• Centaur: A Greek mythical creature with the head and torso of a human, and the body of a horse.
• Contrapposto: The appearance of weight shift in sculpture by the depiction of counter-positioning, in which the body relaxes on one side as the other side takes on the weight of the body and tenses up.
• Cornice: This is part of the Parthenon, and for that matter all Temple architecture, is essentially the roof like structure that holds tops the temple. It consists of two angled pieces (roughly 10 degrees from the horizontal) and a flat or base piece. Typically on the west and east ends of temple Pedimental sculpture would be onto the base cornice piece such that the two angled pieces shelter the sculptural works.
• Doric: The earliest order in Greek architecture, generally massive in appearance, with undecorated columns.
• Frieze: Band of horizontal space located between the capital above the columns of a building, and the cornice, usually used for some form of decoration. It is also common for any structures immediately within a temple (like the inner-cella in the Parthenon) to contain a frieze lining part or all of the same type of space above the columns.
• In Situ: A term referring to artifacts being uncovered in the precise location where they originally were used.
• Metope: This is part of a temple, like the Parthenon, that is located above the frieze bordered of its right and left sides by two triglyphs, and typically continue in such an alternating series around the entire temple exterior. This just about square space is usually filled with relief sculpture that, in most cases, follows a specific theme on each of the separate sides of the temple (ie north, east, south, west).
• Pediment: In Classical architecture, the triangular space formed by the ends of the roof and the cornice, usually used for decoration.
• Relief: Sculpture consisting of figures that are attached to the background, generally a flat surface.
• Temple: Building used for religious purposes; in Greek civilization, generally used to house a cult statue depicting certain gods or goddesses.
• Triglyph: This is part of a temple that is located directly above the outer frieze, and on the sides of a each metope. A triglyph has three vertical bar like dividers that originate from more primitive forms of wooden and reed architecture.
A first century A.D. larger-than-life-size
(74 in. [ 2 m.]) marble statue copied from
a bronze statue originally done by
Polykleitos of Argos ca. 450 B.C.
The statue originally carried a spear in
his left hand. Note how the weight of the
person is placed on the right leg while the
left leg is balancing on the ball of the foot
conveying the moment of cessation of
forward movement.
Polykleitos developed rules of proportion
(a canon) for the human body that
subsequent sculptures followed and built
upon. He and other classical sculptors
stressed the ideal of physical perfection
emphasizing ideal proportions, smooth
skin, regular facial features, etc.
View from behind of marble statue copied from a bronze statue originally done by Polykleitos of Argos ca. 450 B.C.
The Development of Sculpture During the Classic Time Period
• The style of the Classical period in Greek Sculpture developed from the conventions of the earlier Archaic Period. Through the Classical period (which is usually divided into Early, Middle, and Late Classical periods), the human figure evolved from the one-dimensional rigidity of Archaic kouros and kore figures, to a more realistic figure which interacted with its three-dimensional environment.
• The important concept of weight shift was first applied to sculpture in the Early Classical period. With this application, the sculpted figure came to be seen as moving in a direction through space, rather than merely standing in it, as in an Archaic statue. The Middle (High) Classical period saw the application of a Platonic canon of proportions to sculpture; the sculpted figure could represent the sculptor’s ideal of a ‘perfect’ human body.
• Finally, in the Late Classical period, sculpture began to be realized as a three-dimensional form, which took up and enclosed space. The figure could be viewed, like a ‘real’ object, from any three-dimensional angle. With the figure spatially defined, the Classical style gave way to the later Hellenistic period, during which development of the emotional and dramatic aspects of sculpture was to continue.
• West pediment of the Temple of Zeus with the Greek god Apollo in the middle. Apollo represented reason, order and male beauty and was associated with the arts and medicine.
• Most statues were originally created to revere a particular god or goddess; most were of superhuman size and clothed in grandiose garments that have deteriorated over time. Eventually, as the Greek temple began to incorporate elaborate carvings into its structure, sculptors were also called upon to create large reliefs on the pediments, the triangular space between the columns and the roof. These reliefs often depicted ceremonies to honor the gods. Because religion was so important during the beginning of the Classical period, gods were portrayed in a standard form, and the study of naturalism to show individuality was put to rest for a short while.
• In Greek mythology, centaurs are a mythical race with the lower body and legs of a horse and the shoulders and head of a man, and the Lapiths are a mythical race from northern Greece. When the Lapith king invited the centaurs to a wedding feast, the centaurs got drunk and tried to kidnap the Lapith women. The Lapiths fought and defeated the centaurs, and the Lapith women were returned.
• According to legend, Athena sprang fully-grown and fully-armed from the head of her father, Zeus, ruler of the gods on Mount Olympus. It is told that he swallowed his pregnant first wife, Metis, meaning wisdom, so that she would not bear a child stronger than he. In some versions of the story, Athena's birth was assisted by the blacksmith, Hephaestus, who opened Zeus's head with a stroke of his axe. This metaphor may suggest two possible interpretations and pose two questions. Was Zeus demonstrating his power by giving birth without a woman's help, or was he sharing his power with his daughter? Certainly, Hephaestus, a son of Zeus by his second wife, Hera, would appear to be an unlikely "midwife."
Kritios Boy
The Kritios boy belongs to the
Late Archaic period and is
considered the precursor to the
later classical sculptures of
athletes. The Kritios or Kritian boy
was thus named because it is
attributed to Kritios who worked
together with Nesiotes (Harmodius
and Aristogeiton) or their
scholarship, from around 480 BC.
The statue is made of marble and
is considerably smaller than life-
size at 1.17 m (3 ft 10 ins).
The Charioteer. It was sculpted in
about 470 BC and commemorated
the victory of a Syracusan prince in a
chariot race of the Pythian games and
was probably paid for by Gelon, the
tyrant of Syracuse. It is one of the few
ancient bronzes to come down to us
as most would have been melted
down to reuse their valuable raw
material. It was part of a group which
would have stood on a terrace wall up
slope from the Temple of Apollo. It fell
from this terrace and was preserved
by a landslide to be excavated by the
French in 1896. It is famous for the
contrast between its severe Classical
formality and its intensity and life-like
aspects. Note especially the veins on
the hands and the feet. This piece
drives home to us the enormity of
what we have lost from antiquity.
Attic Red Figure
Kylix ca. 480 b.c.
By the Foundry
Painter and the
potter Brygos
Probably from
Vulci, Italy
The interior shows music and revelry. When the cup is rotated so that the
shoulder drapery folds are vertical, the youth tilts drunkenly backwards. On
the exterior, six party-goers sing and dance.
H. 9.3; L. 30.8; Dia. 23.6 cm.
Warrior, from the sea
off Riace, Italy, c.460
BC. H. 6'6" bronze.
The figure is bronze,
with bone and glass
eyes, silver teeth,
copper lips and
nipples.
Riace Warrior
Many original bronze pieces were lost. Greek artists melted down older statues to create new, more naturalistic ones. The Romans and other invaders melted the bronze to create weapons, shields and armor. Fortunately, the Romans also admired the Greek statues and often made marble copies before destroying the original. The bronze statues that survived were often found in shipwrecks in the sea, like the "Young Warrior" figure below found off the coast of Riace, Italy.
Pan Painter. Artemis Slaying Actaeon. c. 470 BC. Red-figure decoration on a bell krater. Ceramic, height of krater 14 5/8" (37 cm).
The High Classical Period
• The High Classical period, lasting from about 450 to 430 BCE, was dominated by a few prominent and renowned sculptors, most notably was Phidias, who supervised the large group of sculptors and architects which built the Parthenon in Athens. The sculptures on the pediments and other outside parts of the building (a temple to the goddess Athena) deal extensively with figures of gods and goddesses of the Greek Pantheon and with heroic and mythological stories.
• An important aspect of High Classical sculpture demonstrated by sculptures of the gods is the fact that the nature of the gods as personifications of concepts – war, love, death, etc. –is recognized. Sculptors aimed to depict the concepts represented by a deity as well as the personality itself. The sculpture of the Parthenon, for example, being a temple of Athena, depicts the different gods and goddesses in relation to her. In fact, the entire pediment on the East end is a depiction of the goddess' birth; with Athena located in the center, being flanked on each side by fellow gods who each react differently to her birth.
Parthenon, the Temple of Athena
• At the top of Mount Olympus in Athens, Greece, is the Acropolis. an assembly of temples and associated structures dedicated to the Greek gods and goddesses. At its peak is the Parthenon, the Temple of Athena Parthenos, patroness of Athens. Most of the temples were built during the 400's bce, although admittedly built atop more ancient structures. Today they lie in various stages of ruin from causes as varied as Roman and Celtic invasion, earthquake and fire, Christian Crusades and Muslim jihads. The image below shows the Acropolis, with the white marble ruins of the Parthenon at the top.
Iktinos and Kallikrates, Parthenon, the Temple of Athena
Parthenos (view from the northwest). Acropolis, Athens,
Greece, 447-438 BC.
The aerial view of the Acropolis below, shows the Parthenon in the upper
left corner. The Parthenon was designed by the Greek architects, Iktinos
and Kallikrates. An inscription on the Temple of Athena, to the right below,
states that "Alexander the Great gave the temple to Athena," meaning that
he paid for its construction.
Reconstruction of the
Athena Parthenos made
by Alan LeQuire and
housed at the Parthenon
replica in Nashville,
Tennessee.
• In the 6th Century the Parthenon was converted to a Christian church and the east pediment torn down and many of its sculptures defaced. When the crusaders who destroyed Constantinople occupied Athens they began a period of western rule and the Parthenon became the Roman Catholic Church of Notre Dame. Finally during the Turkish occupation it was converted into a mosque and a minaret was built on the top. Except for the statue of Athena, the statues of the east pediment and the treasures and statues in the interior, the building was still completely intact.
The Elgin Marbles
• The Elgin Marbles is the popular term for the Parthenon Marbles, a large collection of marble sculptures brought to Britain between 1801 and 1805 by Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, the official British resident in Ottoman Athens, who had ordered them removed from the Parthenon. Since 1939 they have been housed in the purpose-built Duveen Gallery of the British Museum, London.
The Elgin Marbles include some of the statuary from the pediments, the Metope
panels depicting battles between the Lapiths and the Centaurs, as well as the
Parthenon Frieze which decorated the horizontal course set above the interior
architrave of the temple. As such, they represent more than half of what now
remains of the surviving sculptural decoration of the Parthenon: 247 feet from the
original 524 feet of frieze; 15 out of 92 metopes; 17 partial figures from the
pediments, as well as other pieces of architecture.
Parthenon, Akropolis, Athens, ca. 447-432 B.C.E. East Frieze, Slab 7
(marshals and women) It features figures that converge from either end
towards the enigmatic "peplos scene" at the center. These figures include
women, elderly men, and seated Olympian gods. Slab 7 shows two young
marshals and six standing women. The marshal on the left holds a basket.
Some of the women hold phialai (shallow offering dishes).
In 421 B.C. work finally
began on the temple that
was to replace the Archaic
Athena temple the Persians
had razed.
The Temple of Athena Nike
• The Temple of Athena Nike. Last 1/4 of the 5th century BC. Frieze is mutilated, but perhaps represents Greeks fighting Persians -- perhaps at Plataia (479 BC.). Parapet around this temple was composed of marble slabs decorated on the outside with fine reliefs depicting winged Victories with folded or extended wings setting up trophies or leading sacrificial animals to honors Athena. Amphiprostyle Ionic temple on the edge of the Acropolis, where Athenians worshipped the goddess of victory, expressing their hopes for a new triumph in the Peloponnesian War.
Nike (Victory)
Adjusting Her
Sandal fragment
of relief decoration
from the parapet
(now destroyed),
Temple of Athena
Nike, Acropolis,
Athens. Last
quarter of the 5th
century BC.
Marble, height 42"
(107 cm).
Acropolis
Museum, Athens.
Athenian Agora
• The ancient Agora is located in the flat area to the north of the Acropolis. A good view can be obtained from the Areopagos hill, just west of the entrance to the Acropolis.
• The Agora, which has been systematically excavated by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens since 1931, has a rich history and contains public buildings from many different periods.
• The use of the area of the Agora can be traced back to at least the Late Bronze Age or Mycenaean period, when the area was used as a burial ground. Close to 50 tombs have been excavated, many of them belonging to the wealthy families that formed the upper echelons of Athenian society in the 14th and 13th centuries BC.
• The Archaic buildings in the Agora were almost completely destroyed during the Persian invasion of 480/479 BC. When the Athenians returned to their shattered city the Agora was one of the first areas to be rebuilt. Significant work was done in the years from 480 to 470 BC under the leadership of Kimon, son of Miltiades and himself an important general. In his time, a number of new buildings were erected in the Agora, such as the Tholos and the Painted Stoa. Kimon himself was responsible for the setting up of three Herms and for the beautification of the central part of the Agora by the planting of plane trees.
• Major destruction of the Agora took place in 86 BC by the Roman general Sulla. He had been sent to punish Athens for her support of the rebellion against Roman rule by king Mithridates of Pontus. Later in the 1st century BC relations with the Romans improved again and the Emperors resumed the tradition of Hellenistic benefactions to the city. In the Agora the Temple of Ares and the Odeion of Agrippa were built.
Stele Sculpture• Classical art seemed to be more concerned with the
masculine figure as a subject for freestanding sculpture. We see women more often in grave stele.
• The Greek rituals of death and bereavement included making offerings to the deceased at the grave site and the grave marker was central to the offering ritual. It was where the living gathered and the spirits of the dead hovered.
• By the Classical era, people were no longer placing monumental vases or kourai as monuments to the deceased, they sometimes used smaller vases or they had a stone markers carved with relief portraits. They portrayed the dead as they had been in life: men with their occupations and military affiliations, and women with their families and homes.
Grave stele of Hegeso.
The relief stele (h. 1.58 m.,
w. 1 m.) represents the
deceased Hegeso,
daughter of Proxenos,
seated on a chair and, in
front of her, a maiden
servant. It was found in the
cemetery of Kerameikos, in
Athens. Dated to the end of
the 5th century B.C.
The Grave Stele of Hegeso
• Hegeso appears against an architectural background representing her home, which was a common motif. The deceased is seated, looking at a jewel her (some say) slave has brought to her. Though this type of marker is common, Hegeso seems more idealized than other portrait stelai. She also has a contemplative expression (something like resignation to, or acceptance of, her fate) that is expressive, She evokes pathos, the sadness and pity the Greeks felt (and we do too) when another suffers nobly.
white ground painting
• In white ground painting a white coating was applied to the vase before black or red figures (depending upon the period) were painted on. White ground pottery was restricted to lekythoi (see introduction to this section) by the fifth century B.C., and were made popular by the Achilles painter, a workshop whose most famous pieces bore images of the myth of the hero Achilles.
• The white-ground glaze was too temperamental to be used for utilitarian pottery like cups and bowls, since the delicately painted surface could be easily damaged.
• These vases had therefore an ornamental function, usually associated with death. Lekythoi filled with perfumes were placed around the corpse; others were set along the approach to the grave or beside the tomb.
• The illustrations often predicted scenes from the afterlife of the deceased. Our lekythos features a muse, perhaps Erato, playing the kithara on Mount Helicon, while another muse stands by. Found in a young girl's grave, the deceased may have been noted for her musical ability and thought to have taken her place among the muses during her afterlife. Between the muses the love inscription, inscribed by the potter, reads "Axiopeithes, the son of Alkimachos, is beautiful".
White-ground lekythos. In front
of the funerary stele, the tall
base of which consists of six
steps, stands a young spearman
wearing a chlamys. Lekythoi and
garlands are placed on the
steps. The mound itself is visible
behind the stele. The young man
is dead. Time and space have
no reality in the white-ground
lekythoi; all is confused in a kind
of other-worldly unity. The work
is by the so-called 'Bosanquet
painter', c. 440 BC. National
Museum, Athens.
The late Classical Period c. 400 - 323 BC.
• With growth now concentrated in outlying areas, there was understandably less temple building in mainland Greece in this period than there had been in the 5th century, but the Doric temples at Tegea and Nemea in the Peloponnese were important, the former for admitting Corinthian capitals to columns engaged on its interior walls.
• Late Classical: the period ca. 400-323 B.C. Politically this age saw the decline of the individual poleis, and the rise of the northern kingdom of Macedon, which took over all of Greece in 338 BC. Intellectually, saw the rise of developed systems of philosophy in Athens, particularly those of Plato and Aristotle, but also the rise of Rhetoric, or persuasive argumentation,.
• The last is particularly associated with the practical philosopher Isokrates, but its greatest political practitioner was the Athenian politician Demosthenes. The Rich Style continued until ca. 375 BC in art, but the period ca. 375-323 was characterized in sculpture and painting by heavier drapery, a new interaction of cloth and anatomy, new pose-types (especially leaning and more three-dimensional ones), and by the development of new secular and purely artistic types of art. Emotion also re-emerges. Religious architecture shows greater variation than previous temples
PRAXITELES FOLLOWER
Hermes and the Infant
Dionysos
ca 300-250 B.C.
attributed by Pausanias
2.15 m high
restored left leg below knee
from Heraion at Olympia
Praxiteles c.390-330 BC.
Son of the sculptor Cephisodotos, Praxiteles was to be the most popular artists in the ancient world. Many of his sculptures were copied: and his work is mainly known through ancient descriptions and Roman marble copies. One of his original statues, the Hermes statue in Olympia, with the god carrying a young Dionysos as a baby on his arm, has survived. Praxiteles bronze statue of Eirine, godess of Peace, was put on the square of Athens in 370 BC and he founded a new god-ideal.
Apollon, who used to be pictured as a serious and harsh avenger, was portrayed as a youngster. For example, his statue Apollon Sauroktonos, the Lizardkiller, has a young mans body, soft and beautiful. He also made a satyr, and Praxiteles' statues were made to be watched from all angles.
He was also celebrated for his satyrs. His sculptures of the female body as completely different from the male was also an invention much praised. The most famous example is the Aphrodite, just about to take a bath, for the first time depicted as a nude. He also made other statues of the godess, and of her son Eros. The sculptors' model was also his mistress, the hetar Phrynes. She also modeled for other artists, and according to Cicero she was once brought to court, charged with impiety. When her defender pulled her clothes off and showed the jury her magnificent breasts, after a brilliant speech, she was acquitted.
Praxiteles. Aphrodite of
Cnidus (Knidos)
composite of two
similar Roman copies
after the original
marble of c. 350 BC.
Marble, height 6'8"
(2.03 m). The
Aphrodite of Cnidus
(Knidos) is the first
monumental female
nude in classical
sculpture.
Aphrodite of Cnidus
• The statue of the goddess established a canon for the female nude, and inspired many derivatives and variants.
• Here she stands in a contrapposto pose, her weight on her right leg, her left knee slightly bent. A Roman copy, it is not thought to match the polished beauty of the original, which was destroyed in a disastrous fire at Constantinople in AD 475.
The legend is told that the sculpture was so realistic that Aphrodite decided that she needed to see it herself and is said to have remarked, "Where did Praxiteles see me naked?"
Taken from a frieze on the Mausoleum at Halikarnassos. The tomb was
built for Maussollos, who governed Karia in SW Asia Minor. The scene
depicts the mythical battles between Greeks and the Amazons. They
were reputed to have cut off one breast and were skilled in the use of
weapons and combat.
Busts and Portraiture
• In the 5th century BC, portraiture became the trend. Statesmen and generals would have their faces carved on what is called a bust, and sculptors could now create statues that could be recognized as individuals, rather than a standard face. For the next three centuries, sculptors were trained to map a face in complete detail. It is this perfectionism that attracted Roman interest, and when the Greeks fell to the Romans, Roman sculpture became a continuation of Greek sculpture.
Greek silver four drachma coin
of King Lysimachus of Thrace
from around 300 B.C., showing
what is thought to be the first
realistic portrait of a mortal
human being ever; that of
Alexander the Great (whose
successor the issuer was). The
ram's horn seen on his head is
a symbol of divinity, as the
great conqueror was declared a
god soon after his death. On
the reverse is the seated figure
of Athena, a type copied
through the ages even to the
"Seated Liberty" silver dollars in
America.
Alexander the Great Confronts Darius III at the Battle of
Issos from Pompeii. Roman mosaic copy after a Greek
painting of c. 310 BCE, perhaps by Philoxenos or Helen of
Egypt. Museo Archeològico Nazionale, Naples.
Gnosis. Stag Hunt, mosaic floor decoration from Pella,
Macedonia. 300 BCE. Pebbles, height 10'2" (3.1 m).
Archaeological Museum, Pella.
The Hellenistic Period: 323-30 BC
• Hellenistic quick history, • 323. Alexander dies in Babylon.
• Greek revolt. The Lamian War, and the end of Athenian democracy (322).
• Alexander’s generals fight it out (through 276).
– Three kingdoms (plus one)
– Antigonid (Macedonia)
– Seleucid (Mesopotamia)
– Ptolemaic (Egypt)
Temple of Olympian
Zeus in Athens
showing detail of the
Corinthian columns'
capitals. Corinthian
order becoming
commonplace in
Hellenistic Period.
• During the Classical period, the Corinthian order, the most elaborate of the three Greek architectural orders, was used mainly for interior columns. However, late in the Hellenistic period the Greeks began to build temples with Corinthian columns on the exterior, as here in the Temple of Olympian Zeus, in Athens (174 BC-AD 132). Atop tall, slender columns are capitals carved with stylized, curling acanthus leaves.
Theater at Epidauros• "Theatre Epidaurus”, built during the last quarter of the fourth
century B.C. • The harmony of its cavea, the way it 'sits' in the landscape
with the semicircle hollowed out of the side of the hill, and the quality of its acoustics make the Epidaurus theatre one of the great architectural achievements of the fourth century.
• The circular orchestra provides the link with the stage buildings.
• The theater has a capacity of 13000 – 14000 people and was initially used for solo singing, chanting, musical contests (mainly for solo instruments) and theatrical performances of ancient drama. Similar types of activities are still entertained in the site during the summer months.
• The ancient theater of Epidauros is located at the eastern Peloponesse in southern Greece.
• One of the most well-known and better preserved ancient theaters.
• The theater was constructed late in the 4th and early in the 3rd century BC, with a second construction phase during the middle of the 2nd century BC
• Possibly the design of architect Polyklitos.
Gallic Chieftain Killing his Wife and Himself Roman copy in
marble after original Greek bronze from a monument in
Pergamon ca. 220 B.C.
Sculpture in the Hellenistic Period
• Hellenization came after the reign of Alexander the Great, and lasted just a couple of centuries. Alexander the Great had basically conquered all of the world--as the Greeks knew it. His reign brought about the realization of the individual in the Greek culture. Thus art, architecture and cultural identification experienced an alteration.
• Hellenistic sculptures were more realistic and natural. The Hellenistic realism expressed temporary emotional conditions, pain and suffering. The sculptors did emphasize religious and moral values, but took it further in a sense that the secular viewpoint became more important. Moreover, they were also concerned with scenes witnessed in daily life. The sculptures portrayed inner character, feelings and experiences. The underlying trend of this period was an attraction towards eroticism, violence, but above all to provide a truthfulness.
Roman copy in
marble after
original Greek
bronze
from a monument
in Pergamon
Dying Gallic Trumpeterca. 220 B.C.
The kingdom of Pergamon
• Pergamon: kingdom ruled from its capital on the northwestern coast of Asia Minor after 270. In the later third and the second centuries B.C. it became wealthy and powerful, and preserves notable architectural and sculptural embelishment. Was willed to Rome in the 130s by its last ruler.
• The kingdom of Pergamon was at the height of its power, and the city was a flourishing metropolis.
Athena Attacking the
Giants, Detail of the frieze
from the East front of the
altar from Pergamon,
Marble
Statuette of a veiled
and masked dancer,
Hellenistic, 3rd–2nd
century B.C.
Greek
Bronze; H. 8 1/16 in.
(20.5 cm)