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Chapter 5: Ancient Greece
Theme: “Man is the Measure of all things.” ... Protagoras
The exaltation of humanity/rational man as the “measure of all things.” The being
who has the intellectual power to create balance and order in the individual
and in the society as a whole.
*Balance... of mind and body--of the intellect and physical strength/beauty was
of supreme importance to the Greeks.
“... for we are lovers of the beautiful... we cultivate the mind without loss
of manliness... We are the school of Greece.” ... Peracles
Dates:
1200 BCE
800 BCE
700s BCE (1st Olympics 776 BCE)
600s BCE
500s BCE
Trojan War
Homer’s the Iliad and the Odyssey
Geometric
Orientalizing--Daedalic
Archaic
400s BCE (480-404 BCE) Classical -- bounded by two wars
Persian War ends 480 BCE
Peloponnesian War ends 404 BCE
480-450 (1st half)
Early Classical (Severe Style)
450-400 (2nd half)
High Classical (Mature)
300s BCE (400-323)
323-30 BCE
Late Classical
Hellenistic (begins w/Alexander’s Death in 323)
Vase types:
a. hydria
b. lekythos
c. krater
d. amphora
e. kylix
f. oenochoe
Geometric krater
Dipylon cemetery,
Athens--740 BCE
3’ 41/2” high
Style:
Content:
Purpose:
Site:
Orientalizing: 600s
*monsters
*flowers
Archaic: Anavysos Kouros
530 BCE
Content: Who is he?
Site:
Purpose/function:
Archaic: Peplos Kore
from the Acropolis in Athens
530 BCE marble 4’ high
Content: Who is she?
*attributes:
Site:
Purpose/function:
*Painted features: Encaustic
media in which the
pigment is mixed in hot wax
and then applied to marble
Entablature
Column
Platform:
Archaic:
Exekias: Achilles and Ajax playing
a dice game
black-figure amphora
540-530 BCE
Archaic
Euthymides: Three revelers
510 BCE
2’ high
In place of simple signature on the vase, Euthymides wrote:
“Euthymides painted me--as never Euphronios could do!”
Archaic.... to .... Early Classical: 480 BCE
Kritios Boy vs Kouros
Note as many differences as you can see...
Early Classical/Severe Style:
Riace Bronze Warrior
460-450 BCE 6’ 6”
Early Classical/Severe Style
Charioteer 470 BCE Bronze 5’ 11”
Early Classical/Severe Style
Zeus (or Poseidon) 460-450 BCE
Bronze 6’ 10” high
Early Classical/Severe Style
Myron: Diskobolos (Discus Thrower)
450 BCE 5’ 1” high
Roman marble copy of Bronze original
*Roman desire for Greek statues gave rise
to an industry to provide copies made in
marble (less expensive than bronze)
*Clues it is a Roman copy:
--marble
--(intrusive) tree trunk to support
greater weight of stone
--struts between arms/hands and body
to strengthen weak points
Ends Early and begins High Classical
Polykleitos’ Doryphoros (Spear Bearer)
450-440 BCE 6’ 11”
Roman marble copy after Bronze original
The Canon (standard of perfection)
*Polykleitos called his work The Canon as it
embodied his vision of the ideal statue of a nude
male athlete or warrior.
The Doryphoros is the demonstration piece to
accompany the treatise on the subject. It is the
culmination of nearly two centuries of searching
for the ideal proportions for the human figure.
Kresilas: Pericles
Roman Marble copy of a
Bronze original 429 BCE
*Herm: bust on pillar
Delian League: (headquarters on Delos). In 454 BCE the Delian
treasury was transferred to Athens (ostensibly for security
reasons). Pericles would convert the alliance into an Athenian
empire--angering Greeks and sewing the seeds for the future ‘civil
war’ between the Athenians and the Spartans.
Iktinos and Kallikrates: The Parthenon
(Temple of Athena Parthenos)
Acropolis Athens, Greece 447-438 BCE
Phidias: Athena Parthenos
38’ tall gold & ivory--Chryselephantine
(Cella of the Parthenon) 438 BCE
*Her size dictated the width of the facade--8
columns across rather than the usual 6
Athene holds Nike (the winged female
personification of victory) in her hand.
shield exterior = Amazonomachy
shield interior = Gigantomachy
soles of sandals = Centauromachy
The Nike and mythological battles are
all metaphors for the triumph of...
--order over chaos
--civilization over barbarism
--Athens over Persia
Site?
Content?
Numbers?
Content other 3 sides?
Helios and his horses; Dionysos (Herakles?); Birth of Athene
East Pediment--Parthenon 438-432 BCE
greatest height 4’ 3”
Phidian Style: MAMS
M=
A=
M=
S=
The Panathenaic Festival Procession Frieze:
Parthenon
447-438 BCE 3’ 6” high
Propylaia
*Caryatid
Grave Stele of Hegeso
Dipylon cemetery, Athens
400 BCE Marble 5’ 2”
*Note year: The Pelopponesian War
ended in 404 BCE. Though we are about
to move into the Late Classical, this stele
is still in style of the High Classical-Phidian: MAMS
*Style
*Content
*Purpose/Site
*Patron
Late Classical Period:
Praxiteles, Aphrodite of Knidos
Roman marble copy of an original 350-340 BCE
6’ 8” high
*5th century: belief that rational human beings could impose
order on their environment led to ‘perfect’ statues like the Canon.
*4th Century a time of political upheaval... brings an end to High
Classical idealism and serenity. Focus moves to the individual and
the real world of appearances rather than the ideal.
*Praxiteles: Humanizes the Olympian dieties
*Praxitelian style... less solemn grandeur and greater sensuality. Note
more pronounced S-curve and marble that imitates soft radiant
flesh:
*Style: Praxitelian
*Site: Tholos... (why?) pool of water...
*Content:
Late Classical Period
Praxiteles: Hermes and the infant Dionysos
Copy of a statue by Praxiteles
330-270 BCE 7’ 1” high
Style:
Content:
Pose:
Late Classical Period
Grave Stele of a young hunter
340-330 BCE
Marble, 5’ 6” high
*Skopas: sculptor whose
works (none of which survive)
known for intense
emotionalism
*This grave stele has the
psychological tension for which
Skopas was famous
*Content:
Late Classical Period
Lysippos: Apoxyomenos (Scraper)
Roman marble copy of bronze original
350 BCE 6’ 9”
Lysippos:
*new proportions
*new energy
*needs to be seen from all sides
Late Classical Period
Lysippos: Weary Herakles
Roman marble copy of bronze 320 BCE
10’ 5” high
*Content: Present in style and subject
*Continued humanization of Gods and Heroes
*Site/Location
Artist?
Period?
Mosaic after painting by Philoxenos of Eretria or Helen of Egypt: Battle of Issus 310 BCE Tessera mosaic 8’ 10” x 16’9”
*Tesserae--tiny stones/pieces of glass cut to a desired size and shape
Archaic
Archaic?
--
Early Classical
--
High Classical
--
Late Classical
--
Hellenistic
Archaic
Early Classical?
Early Classical
High Classical?
High Classical
Late Classical?
Late Classical
Hellenistic?
Hellenistic
VOCABULARY:
Acropolis
Vases: Krater, Amphora, Kylix, Lekythos, Hydria, Oenochoe
Temple Vocab:
Kouros
Kore
Encaustic
Archaic Smile
Cella
Battles:
Gigantomachy... Battle between _____ and _____
Centauromachy... Battle between _____ and _____
Amazonomachy... Battle between _____ and _____
Caryatids
Tesserae
Personification
Cere Perdue
Contrapposto
ARTISTS/POLITICAL LEADERS/HISTORIANS:
Exekias
Euphronios
Euthimides
Myron
Polykleitos
Pericles
Iktinos
Kallikrates
Phidias
Praxiteles
Scopas
Lysippos
Darius
Alexander
Vitruvius
Think like a Greek....
Man (and Woman, of course) is a rational (intelligent) being... that’s you!
Good luck!!