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Transcript
APAH: Greek Art – Architecture
Temples
Evolution from shrines to temples
Evolution from wood/mud-brick construction to marble
Availability of marble
Housed cult statues
Public ritual – not private
Face outward – Altar at front of temple
Building as sculpture
Exterior more important than interior
Monuments not just buildings
Built without mortise – extreme precision
Reflects Greek principles: symmetry, harmony, balance, order
Ideal forms
Contrast to other civilizations
Mathematical order – Rationality
Development – complexity
Temple Orders
Order = Platform – Column – Entablature
Doric, Ionic, Corinthian
Platform – Podium
Stylobate
Stereobate
Column (2 or 3 part) – Base, Shaft, Capital
No base on Doric columns
Fluting – vertical channels
Doric-sharp
Ionic-flat
Entasis – Gradual curving (tapering) toward column top
Drum – Column segment
Entablature
Architrave
Frieze – Decorated band b/w architrave and cornice
Doric
Triglyphs, Metopes
Ionic
Open
Used for reliefs
Cornice – projecting crown of entablature
Pediment – triangular space at the end of a building
Temple Forms
Elevation – drawing of building profile
Cella – room
Naos – room for cult statue
Portico – porch
Colonnade – walkway w/ columns
Prostyle – in front
Amphiprostyle – along ends
Peripteral – around
Dipteral – around twice
Early Architecture
Plan of Temple A (c. 625 BC)
Prinias, Greece (Crete)
Simple megaron
Sculptural decoration
Archaic Architecture
Temple of Hera I (c. 550 BC)
Paestum, Italy
Doric order
Unusual central column row
Lack of central space
Forced canonical break
Odd number of columns
Created 2 : 1 ratio
Compressed capitals
Thick columns, Tight spacing, Severe entasis
Classical Architecture
Temple of Hera II (c. 460 BC)
Paestum, Italy
Note differences with Temple of Hera I
Six column façade – thinner columns
2 column antis
2 column rows in cella (naos)
Acropolis
District of Athena – sacred temples
Pericles
Persian Wars
Persian sacked Athens 480 BC
Xerxes
Oath of Plataea
Delian League
Athenian empire
Confiscated treasury
Building program
Restore glory of Athens
Propylaia
Gateway to Acropolis
Parthenon (c. 438 – 432 BC)
Temple of Athena Parthenos
Iktinos & Kallikrates architects
Pinnacle of Greek architecture
Under Pericles – Golden Age of Athens
Statement on Athens
Rebuilt Acropolis (not reassembled)
Delian League treasury
Athens – Athena
Cult Statue of Athena Parthenos
Phidias
Ivory and gold
~ 40’ high
Mix of Ionic and Doric features
Ionic “Pollution”
Interior Ionic columns
Interior Ionic frieze
2 cella (naos / treasury)
Refinements (intentional departures)
Beautiful proportions – harmonious ratios
Formula: x = 2y + 1 where x > y
(17 columns x 8 columns)
9 : 4 ratio
Stylobate, cella, width b/w columns to width of column
Curved platform/entablature
Columns lean inward
Width b/w corner column & neighbors is closer
Optical corrections ??
Aesthetic value ??
Temple of Athena Nike (victorious)
Commemorated the victory over the Persians
Battle of Marathon
Greets visitors to Acropolis
Stands over the entrance
Ionic order
Erechtheion (421-405 BC)
Temple of Athena Polias
Protector of the city
Sacred laurel tree
Laurel sculpture of Athena
Unique among temples
Built by Phidias
Poseidon vs. Athena
Mythical founding of Athens
Irregular construction
Peloponnesian War
Porch of the Maidens
Caryatids
Maidens of Artemis
Baskets on heads / hands holding offerings
No pediment
Weight on outer leg
Facing Pantheon
Watching procession
Late Classical – Hellenistic Architecture
Temple of Apollo
313 BC
Didyma, Turkey
Dipteral with classical column numbers
No pediment, no roof – hypaethral
Sacred spring / Laurel trees to Apollo
Stairway to elevated cella – stage for the oracle
Ideal City
Priene, Turkey
Hippodamos of Miletos – father of city planning
Strict grid pattern
“Hippodomian plan”
Courtyards for homes
Agora – center of civic / economic life
Stoa – covered colonnade
Stoa of Attalos II
Athens
Pergamon, Turkey
Powerful city of Hellenistic world
Altar of Zeus (c. 175 BC)
Battle of Zeus against the giants
Conflict for control of the world
Attalos I defeated the Gauls in Asia Minor
Given to Rome in 133 BC