Title: Hellenistic Greece 4
1Hellenistic Greece 4
2Hellenistic Sculpture
- Closed pose popular at this time.
- Owes much to the style of Lysippos
- Uses contrasting axes, torsion, projecting arms
and knees to create a sense of spatial freedom.
3Hellenistic Sculpture
- The crossing of the legs creates thrusts and
major surfaces to the left and right of the
figure the movement on the left is counteracted
by the movement of the river god.
4Hellenistic Sculpture
- The strong diagonal created by the stretching of
drapery from the left hand to the right shoulder
is counteracted by the turn of the head to the
viewers right. - These internal forces seem to make the energy of
the goddess radiate in many directions and invite
the viewer to study the statue from many angles.
5Lysippos Mini-Review
- Single most creative and influential artist of
the Hellenistic period. - Contemporary of Praxiteles in late Classical
period, one of the creators of Hellenistic art. - During the first 75 years of the period, he and
his school created new types of monuments and
made stylistic innovations that would be used in
Hellenistic art for centuries.
6Lysippos Innovations
- Modified Polykleitos canons his heads were
smaller, bodies leaner (example Apoxyomenos from
340/330). - His innovations were concentrated in 3 areas
- Continuing theatricality (manipulation of scale
for effect brought colossal sculpture back into
vogue, made a bronze Zeus statue 18 meters (54
feet) high. - Exploration of emotional expressionism (started
in his portraits of Alexander). - Expanded interest in symbolism and allegory.
7Tanagra Figurines
- New class of miniature terracottas arise in
Boiotia c. 330-200 BCE, a town 12 miles east of
Thebes. - Figurines discovered through grave robbing in the
late 1800s, from late 4th-3rd c. graves. - 8,000-10,000 graves were robbed.
8Tanagra Figurines
- Victorians fell in love with these sculptures and
competed to collect them. - Many forgeries were created.
- Mold-made and painted figurines.
- Used chiefly as grave goods, so many survive with
paint relatively intact.
9Woman in Blue
- High artistic quality
- Artists used 2 molds to make them, one for the
front, 1 for the back. - Sectional molding was also used in the best
pieces so that heads, arms, legs could be
attached at slightly different angles, giving
each piece individuality.
10Tanagra Figurines
- Standing woman pose was most popular.
- Chitons and cloaks were tightly wrapped around
the body and brightly colored. - Blue and purplish pink were popular colors.
- Some wear a broad conical hat (sun?), likely worn
in everyday life, if seldom seen in art.
11A Large Miniature
- This is a very tall Tanagra figurine, standing at
33 centimeters.
12Other Poses
13Compare Veiled Dancer from Alexandria
- In the 5th c., artists represented the body
through drapery. - Hellenistic artists represented drapery through
drapery. - Miniature bronze statuette c. 250-150, double
twist pose.
14Tanagra Aphrodite and Eros
15Open Pose Dancing Faun
- Roman copy of 3rd c. Greek original. Found in
Pompeii. - 71 cm height
- Extraordinary example of open composition. Fills
all 3 dimensions. Wild abandon of limbs, arms
flung out. Natural representation of anatomy.
16Dancing Faun
- Dramatically twisted pose.
- Leads the eye, motivates the viewer to walk
around the statue to take in the different angles.
17Other Types of Sculpture
- Aphrodite of Melos (Venus de Milo).
- Head very classical small mouth, smooth brow,
marked nose ridge (5th-4th c. precedents) stuck
on a characteristically open style pose of
Hellenistic baroque. - Carving and finish emphasize the softness of the
skin.
18Venus de Milo
- Discovered in 1820 in bits by a local peasant.
- Turks and French tussled over it French won.
- Claims
- A broken inscription naming the artist
(Ages?andros son of Menides, from Antioch on
the river Maeander) had been found, then lost
artist too obscure. - Another inscription said that it had been the
gift of a local benefactor to a civic gymnasium
(it stood in a niche unfinished back). - One of its arms did survive, with an apple in its
hand.
19Reactions
- Rodin Behold, the marvel of marvels . . . The
work is the expression of the greatest antique
inspiration it is voluptuousness regulated by
restraint, ti is the joy of life cadenced,
moderated by reason. - Now thought to be of the 2nd of 1st c. BCE.
20Art Historical Puzzle
- What were her arms doing?
- Lots of reconstructions.
21(No Transcript)
22Capitoline Venus, Copy of 3rd c. Greek Original
- From the early 19th c theory that such
sculptures became progressively more nude from
the Knidian Aphrodite on. Here we see her
having dropped the robe entirely. Pose covers
(draws attention to?) her breasts and pubic area.
23Aphrodite and Pan
- Delos, c. 100 BCE
- Found in a club house of a group of merchants
from Beirut - Beard and Henderson speculate
motel art for businessmen? They also claim it
is one of the most disliked statues in
scholarship. - Seen by some scholars as an allusion to
prostitution via display of her sandal.
Prostitutes had the word follow picked out on
the sole of one of their sandals, - Thus she is welcoming, not resisting, Pans
advances.
24Orestes and Electra
- 1st c. CE based on 1st c. BCE prototypes.
- Deliberately archaizing.
- Susan Woodford unimaginative adaptation . . . A
dry work, an unattractive pasting together of two
unrelated older statues . . . The side views are
worthless . . . Romans displayed such statues
against walls, designed for one view only.
25Laocoon
- Roman statue, altering Hellenistic Greek
original. - Found in 1509 in Rome, now in Vatican.
- Details of suffering, depiction of dramatic
moment - typical of Hellenistic baroque style. - But scholars now think it is not from this
period, but rather a revival of it in the 1st c.
CE.
26Laocoon
- Pliny preserves the names of its sculptors
Hagesandros, Polydoros Athenodoros of Rhodes - Has strong connections in both style and
conception with the Gigantomachy on the Pergamene
Altar moment of maximal agony and violence
chosen to sum up the story. - Serpents twine around the humans, just as they do
on Altar. Laokoon screams, struggles contorted
face, open mouth, massive wreath of hair all call
to mind the giants on the Altar.
27Comparison
- Similar tilt of head, anguished expression, arm
angle - But Laokoon is carved using different drill
techniques.
28Laokoon Restorations
29The Fascination of the Piece
- 1510 competition to see which of 4 famous
artists could make the best copy. - Judge Raphael.
- Winning copy immortalized in bronze. Spin-off
copies proliferated. - Vatican acquired it for its new sculpture
gallery Napoleon carted it off 300 years later
for the Louvre later returned to the Vatican.
30Sperlonga
- Sculptures in the cave discovered in 1957.
- The grotto here held many sculptures made by the
same sculptors of the Laokoon (?), bought by the
Roman emperor Tiberius. - Highlight of a sea-side dining room attached to a
luxury villa.
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33Caveat
- The Sperlonga sculptures were found in tiny
pieces, having been smashed up and dumped into
the central pool (by early Christians?). - Came to light during the construction of a
coastal road. Chief engineer explored the cave. - Jigsaw puzzle of reconstruction.
- Lots of other sculptures (small and large) have
been found there carved prow of ship in rock
with glass mosaic - Argo.
34Odysseus with Statue of Athena
35Blinding Polyphemos
36Another Light
37Skylla
38Skylla Group Reconstruction
39Sailor Caught by Skylla
40Comparison
41Skopas of Paros
- Meleager, c. 340
- Exponent of the pathos idiom. Exploration of
personal experience. - Active in the mid 4th century sculptor and
architect. - Used facial expressions to generate psychological
tension/excitement. - Deeply cut eyes (concentrated gaze), head and
neck turned to one side (attention suddenly
called to something) head tilted, lips slightly
parted.
42(No Transcript)
43Bronze Portrait Head, early 1st c. BCE
- Found in the palaistra at Delos, probably part of
a statue of a standing male figure wearing a
himation. - His glance reflects an interior world full of
anxiety uncertainty.
44Another View
45Horse and Jockey, Bronze, c. 200 BCE
- Recovered from a shipwreck off the coast of
Artemision. - Athlete shown in throes of competition rather
than victorious, after (Charioteer at Delphi,
etc.). Extreme tension depicted in both boy and
horse. - Tremendous speed of horse mirrored in the blowing
folds of the boys chiton.
46Comparison Stele with Horse and Boy, late 4th c.
- Found in Athens in 1948.
- Carved in deep relief probably from the last
Attic stelai before the law forbidding them in
317. - Consists of 2 blocks, but at least one more is
missing. - Ethiopian groom attempts to control a large
horse, offering it some kind of food. - Head of horse projects away from the block, while
the body remains attached to it.
47Drunken Old Woman Hellenistic realism
- Pergamon, c. 200 BCE
- Original reputedly by Myron, but not likely.
- One proposed context
- Votive in Temple of Dionysos, for the
Lagynophoria, a cult occasion when even
respectable people could get drink, from huge
jars (lagynoi) of wine?
48Reception
- Found sometime before 1700 given as a gift to
Germany in early 18th c. - 1830 not put in the new Sculpture Gallery in
Munich - 1895 finally displayed publically, but
segregated from the Greek masterpieces, put into
the Roman section. - Now has star rating
49Farnese Heracles
- Marble version of a Lysippean type of c. 320 BCE,
by sculptor Glykon of Athens c. 3rc c. CE (?).
10 ft. 5 in for baths of Caracella. Found in the
16th century there. - Pollitt Lysippos seems to have been the
instigator of . . . Hellenistic shock tactics
in the use of scale. There is something
intrinsically astounding about either extreme
bigness or smallness, and L. in his Herakles
figures seems to have exploited both.
50Weary Herakles
- Lysippos sparked the renewed interest in colossal
statues - Popular in the archaic period
- Rejected in the classical period except for a few
cult statues - Popular in Hellenistic period
- Here contrast between heavily muscled body and
the tired pose (barely able to stand). Holds
Apples of the Hes. - When discovered lacked a left hand both legs
below the knee. Michelangelo asked a pupil to
make replacement legs these were so good that,
when the originals were found not long
afterwards, no one could bear to make the
substitution. Originals put back in 1787.
51Terme Boxer (c. 10050 BCE)
- Realistic representation broken nose,
cauliflower ears, bleeding wounds, swelling
muscles. - Breaks idealism of classical athletes
52(No Transcript)
53Bronze Dwarves (c. 150-100)
- Part of what is called Alexandrian
grotesquerie interest in the unusual, whether
mythological (Cyclops) or real (dwarves,
hunchbacks, handicapped people, etc.). - Such representations were thought to avert the
evil eye.
54Pottery Developments Gnathian Ware
- Review by the 4th century on the mainland,
figured decoration of pottery disappears. Black
Glaze ware. - Gnathian Ware is in use until c. 200 BCE black
slip with gold and white painted on. Pots are
textured with scallops molded in the clay.
55Centuripe Ware
- Good for dating a site, since it was only in use
for 25 years, from 300-275 BCE. - Named after an inland town in Sicily.
- Lots of decorations in 3 dimensions polychrome
painted decoration done after firing. Depicted
elegant women in quiet domestic settings.
Contained cremations.
56How Rome Became Involved in Greece
- Begins in the early 2nd c. BCE.
- In 168, evidence of 1st Roman conquests in
Greece. First symbol of Roman supremacy on Greek
soil. - Aemilius Paulus erected a monument in Delphi to
celebrate his victory at the battle of Pydna and
the ensuing Roman domination of northern Greece. - Pillar with a horseman on top, 30 feet high.
Frieze at top depicts battles between the
Macedonians and the Romans, style borrowed from
Greeks vs. Barbarians. Who is the barbarian?
57How Rome Became Involved in Greece
- 146 BCE Rome decided to teach Greece a lesson.
Destroyed Corinth. - 88 BCE Roman general Sulla attacked and sacked
Athens, removing all the citys art to Rome. - 69 BCE Crete was taken over by the Romans.
- 44 BCE Caesar rebuilt Corinth, established it as
the capital of the Roman province of Achaea.
58Athenian Agora
- 2nd c. CE
- West side pretty much unchanged.
- Basilica built by Hadrian (117-138) a large 3
aisled hall used for markets, administration,
lawcourts. Here administrative.
59Athenian Agora
- 15 BCE Agrippa, son-in-law of Augustus, built an
Odeion right in the middle of the agora. Had a
huge span of 25 m with no internal supports over
the auditorium, which seated 1,000. Stood several
storeys high, dominated the agora.
60Odeion
61Market of Caesar Augustus
- Formal marketplace to the east of the Agora,
behind the Stoa of Attalos. - Started in the 50s, finished c. 11-9 BCE.
- Series of shops all around a peristyle court.
This was now the open center the Romans filled
the old agora with the Odeion and temple of Ares.