* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Greek - Egyptian - Visual Art Notes
Hindu temple architecture wikipedia , lookup
North Acropolis, Tikal wikipedia , lookup
Architecture of Kathmandu wikipedia , lookup
Japanese Buddhist architecture wikipedia , lookup
Ancient Greek architecture wikipedia , lookup
Dravidian architecture wikipedia , lookup
Roman temple wikipedia , lookup
Large-scale Sacred Architecture When a religion becomes firmly established and tied to political power, expensive, labor-intensive, long-term projects are possible. By being large-scale and reducing the individual to a spectator adds to the religious importance of the site. Geometry is a key component to the design to suggest the following: perfection, completion, formality & symmetry as an excellent visual metaphor for divinity and political power. These following images are examples of four different types of temples, Prehistoric – Greek – Egyptian – Mesoamerican. Buddhist and Hindu temples are in the next PowerPoint. Prehistoric Stonehenge Salisbury Plain, England 3100 – 1600 BCE Early man utilized a post-and-lintel system in building ritual and religious structures. Stonehenge is one of the best known structures designed with two concentric circles. Aerial view of Stonehenge on the Salisbury Plain, England Stonehenge has been subjected to many theories about its origin, ranging from the academic worlds of archaeology to explanations from mythology and the paranormal. Prehistoric Mnajdra Temple Malta 3600 BCE Neolithic Through archaeological study, this site seems to have been used for astronomical observation and/or as a calendrical site, due to the alignment of stones to the Solstices and Equinox. Many artifacts were recovered from within the temples suggesting that these temples may have been used for religious purposes, perhaps to heal illness and/or to promote fertility. Temple of Poseidon 440 – 444 BCE Greek Temple Characteristics of a Greek temple used a post-and-lintel system in colonnaded porches on all four sides with a concentric center room and covered with a wooden roof. A decorative frieze relief (below) wrapped around the building above the columns and there were two triangular pediments on the two short sides of the rectangular form. Only the priests entered the sacred areas of the temples and ceremonies were held outside. The exteriors of temples were richly decorated with sculptures and were brightly painted. Frieze from the Parthenon Greek Temple Iktinos and Kallikrates Parthenon Athens, Greece 447- 432 BCE 228’ x 104’ Pentelic marble Parthenon Marbles in the British Museum From the pediment (the triangular piece on the two short sides of the rectangle), these original marble sculptures were taken off the Parthenon and other buildings on the acropolis in Athens and shipped to London by Lord Elgin in 1801-1812, while he was the British ambassador. Do you feel these marbles sculptures should be returned to Athens? Parthenon Detail of columns and interior space Greek Temple Greek temples have also been designed in two concentric circles, as well as the traditional rectangular form. A caryatid is a female shaped figure used as a column to support an entablature on her head. Tholos in the Sanctuary of Athena Delphi, Greece 4th C BCE Erechtheion with Caryatid Porch 421 – 406 BCE Egyptian Temple Temple of Isis Philae, Egypt continuous building 560 BCE – 120 BCE Egyptian temples have two large symmetrical front “pylons” which flank the entrance to the temple complex. The pylon façades had carved reliefs and were brightly painted. Cult temples, used to worship gods were located on the east bank of the Nile River, while funerary temples were on the west side. Egyptian Temple Pharaoh Ramesses II & Queen Nefertari Meritmut Abu Simbel, Egypt 1257 - 1250 BCE These two funerary temples were tunneled into the hillside in the traditional style of flanked pylons. Temple of Ramesses II four colossal seated statues Temple of Nefertari six colossal standing statues Queen Nefertari fresco inside temple Egyptian Temple Aligned to the landscape with a north-south axis to parallel the Nile River and east-west marking the path of the sun god Re, symbolizing life, death & resurrection. Sanctuary in the Temple of Horus Hypostyle Hall in the Temple of Amun Computer generated imagery of Temple of Isis Mesoamerican Temple A stepped pyramid or ziggurat (mountain) of solid mass of Earth with a small building on top, covered with huge clay bricks faced with stone and finished with a coat of smooth, white limestone plaster. Some parts were painted with bright colors. Alignment usually ran east-west with the sun. Ceremonies held on the steps and ledges. Pyramid of the Sun Aztec Teotihuacán, Mexico before 150 CE 768’ width base El Castillo Mayan Chichén Itzá, Mexico 9th – 12th Century CE Mesoamerican Temple Mayan Tikal Guatemala 200 – 900 CE Stairs are extremely narrow and steep and it is believed that the priests crawled on all four limbs up and down these temples. Mesoamerican Temple Mayan La Rosalila – original wall Copán, Honduras 5th – 9th Century CE Replica of La Rosalila (above two images) Mayan Archaeology Museum in Copán, Honduras 2000