Title: Minos and the Heroes of Homer:
1Gardners Art Through the Ages, 12e
- Chapter 4
- Minos and the Heroes of Homer
- The Art of the Prehistoric Aegean
2The Prehistoric Aegean
Cyclades Knossos Thera Phaistos
Hagia Triada Tiryns Mycenae
3Goals
- Identify the geographic area known as the Aegean.
- Discuss the visual aspects and possible context
of the Cycladic sculptures. - Discuss Minoan society and architecture.
- Understand visual aspects of Minoan art.
- Relate significant aspects of archeological
excavations at Mycenae. - Understand the link between culture and
architecture of Mycenae - Discuss the relationship between Minoan and
Mycenaean art and culture
4Important Names
- Arthur Evans British archaeologist who uncovered
the palace at Knossos, Crete, in 1900. He named
the people who built it the Minoans, after the
mythological king Minos. - Homer Composed the Iliad c. 750 BCE, one of the
finest epic poems ever created. It describes the
Trojan wars. - Heinrich Schliemann German businessman-turned-arc
haeologist who uncovered Troy (Hissarlik, Turkey)
between 1870-1890. He discovered that the site
held a number of fortified cities built on top of
the remains of each other.
5The Greece of Homer
- Originally thought the world described in Homers
epic poem the Iliad was mythological. - But in the late 1800s. Heinrich Schliemann
proved that belief wrong with the discovery of
Troy and a fire that dated to the time of
Homers epic. - Next to be moved from fiction to history was King
Minos of Knossos, Crete more recent Minoan
remains found on Thera now Santorini
Example of Linear A
6The Early Cycladic Figures
- Made of the abundant local marble, found on Naxos
Paros. - Most were statues of nude women with their arms
folded, like many Stone Age examples. - Traces of paint are found on several.
- Believed to be funerary offerings.
- Male figures include the lyre player from Keros.
2700-2500 BCE ?
7Cycladic Art 2700-2500 BCE
- Stylistic characteristics of the Bronze Age
statuettes from the Cyclades - a. strikingly abstract
- b. human body rendered in highly schematized
manner - c. originally painted in bright colors
8Cycladic Art
- Resemblances with 20th cen. works
- Wilhelm Lehmbruck ?
-
- ? Henry Moore
9Minoan Culture and Art
Aerial view and plan of the palace at Knossos
1700-1400 BCE
10Figure 4-4 Plan of the palace at Knossos
(Crete), Greece, ca. 17001400 BCE.
11Minoan Culture and Art
- Middle Minoan palaces destroyed around 1700
BCEearthquake? - Knossos is a Late Minoan palace.
- Famed for the Minotaur's labyrinth Theseus
battled the bull-man with help from Ariadne - Labrys double-ax found everywhere in Knossos
as a sign of sacrifice. - Palace made of rough fieldstones covered in clay.
12Minoan Culture and Art
- Architectural characteristics of the Palace at
Knossos - a. Grouped around large rectangular court.
- b. Two long corridors separate rooms of different
functions. - c.
Well-constructed with thick
walls of rough, unshaped
fieldstones
embedded in clay. - d.
Terracotta pipes provided
drains and light wells in
staircases provided
air and
light.
13Minoan Culture and Art
- The problem with Arthur Evans
- We owe a lot to him, BUT
- His reconstruction strays far from the original,
even when there were appropriate fragments. - Approached the reconstruction as a Victorian
gentleman note the hairstyles!
14Minoan Culture and Art Palace Frescos
- The Bull Leaping Fresco at Knossos.
- Fair/Dark skin convention for female/male
representation. - Elongation and pinched waists- show more movement
than previous paintings.
15Minoan Culture and Art Thera Cyclades
- Akrotiri Miniature Ships Fresco. survived
because buried by a volcano thus not
mis-restored - 17 high/at the top of 3 sides of a room.
- Provides information about sea-faring practices.
- Figures represented according to their role.
- Reminds us of Homers Iliad. ca.
1650 BCE
16Minoan Culture and Art Thera Cyclades
- Akrotiri Spring Fresco Nature is the sole
subject - Intended to express joy.
- 1st known example of a pure landscape painting.
- Lacks humans and narrative element.
- Frescos are now wet or true frescos. Painted
into wet plaster. Long lasting.
ca. 1650 BCE
17Minoan Culture and Art Pottery Crete
- Sea Life on Pottery Kamares ware -- Phaistos
- Used potters wheels new creamy white reddish
brown. 1 8 hight - Inspired octopus vase from Palaikastro ca. 1500
BCE 11 high
18Hagia Triada southern coast of Crete
- Overview of the site.
- Hagia Triada was just to the west of Phaistos
19Hagia Triada
- Late Minoan sarcophagus 1450-1400 BCE
- Illustrate Minoan funerary rites.
- Reminiscent of the early Cycladic lyre player.
- Also Hu-nefer's Last Judgment. Egypt ca.
1290-1280 BCE
20The Development of Minoan Pottery
- The Harvester Vase finest surviving example of
Minoan relief sculpture. ca. 1500 BCE - Only have the upper half and neck of the vase
- Mostly profile/frontal with the exception of the
man beating time. - Obvious study of human anatomy.
21The Development of Minoan Sculpture
- Goddess or Priestess? Snake Goddess Knossos
1600 BCE - No large temples found in Minoan Crete.
- Made of faience glazed earthenware
- Bare breasts suggest fertility function leopard
on head suggests power over nature. So evidence
is ambiguous.
22The Development of Minoan Sculpture
- Sculpture in gold and ivory probably
imported from Egypt. - Another serpent woman
- Young god from Palaikastro1500-1475 BCE
23Decline of Minoan Civilization
- Mycenaeans may have moved into Knossos, Crete at
end of the new palace period around 1400 BCE - Knossos destroyed around 1200 BCE
- Focus moved to the mainland Distinctive
Mycenaean culture existed by 1300 BCE - Giant citadels were builtMycenae was only one.
- Best preserved are Tiryns Mycenae, started
around 1400 BCE Homer knew of Tiryns - The heavy walls contrasted with the open Cretan
palaces.
24Plan of the palace and southern part of the
citadel, Tiryns, Greece, ca. 14001200 BCE.
Mycenaean Art Architecture
25Mycenean Art and Architecture
- Architectural innovations included the corbelled
arch. - Composed of lintels, no mortar is used
- Compare with barrel vault at Ctesiphon, p.51.
26Mycenean Art and Architecture
27Mycenaean Culture and Art Mycenae
- View of the citadel remains in the
surrounding landscape - 1300-1250 BCE
28Mycenaean Culture and Art
King Agamemnon House of Atreus ca. 1300-1259
BCE A few generations before the Trojan War.
29Mycenean Art and Architecture
- The Lion Gate forced attackers into a narrow
channel. - Formed of 2 monoliths and a lintel with the
triangular relief of lions and columns with a
corbelled arch above - This kind of guardianship goes back to Egypt
Assyria.
30Mycenean Art and Architecture
- Treasury of Atreus
- A beehive or tholos tomb. 1300-1250 BCE
- Misnamed.
Made of a series of stone corbelled courses,
ending in a lofty dome, 43 ft high.
31Mycenean Art and Architecture
32Gold Mask from Mycenae
- Funerary mask from Grave Circle A 1600-1500
BCE - A beaten gold mask.
- An attempt to render the human face at life
size. - Different ages and features were found on other
masks. - NOT Agamemnon
33Inlaid dagger blade with lion hunt -- from Grave
Circle A made of bronzeca. 1600-1500 BCE
34Female Head from Mycenae ca. 1300-1250.
- Flesh tone indicates a female.
- Facial paint or tattoo
- 6 ½ inches high
- May be from goddess cult.
The watchful eye of Argos?
35Last, but not least!
- Warriors Vase Mycenae ca. 1200 BCE
- Form is a krater, a bowl for mixing wine and
water. - No indication of settings and a return to
the repetitive forms of earlier eras. - Harbinger of a more abstracted style to come.
36Discussion Questions
- What do you think are possible functions for the
Cycladic sculptures? - Compare the Egyptian Old Kingdom and New Kingdom
Armana period styles of wall painting with
Minoan wall paintings. - What was the focus of Minoan art? Did they
emphasize the afterlife? - Why do you think the Minoan civilization
declined? Give reasons for your ideas.