Title: The Classical Style in the Arts
1Chapter 5
- The Classical Style in the Arts
2The Classical Style
- The quest for harmonious order was the driving
force behind the revolution of the classical
style . . . . - (Fiero 108)
3The Classical Style
- Clarity
- Harmony
- Proportioned order
- (Fiero 108)
4- Humanism, realism, and idealism are hallmarks of
Greek art. (Fiero 110)
5- Greek art is . . . humanistic not only because
it observes fundamental laws derived from the
human physique, but because it focuses so
consistently on the actions of human beings.
(Fiero 110)
6Leonardo's Vitruvian Man, 1490
http//leonardodavinci.stanford.edu/submissions/cl
abaugh/history/leonardo.htmltop
7Painting on Pottery
- ca. 1200-700 BCE
- The Geometric Period
- ca. 700-480 BCE
- The Archaic Period
- 480-323 BCE
- The Classical Period
8The Geometric Period stylized motifs
http//www.uwm.edu/Course/mythology/0100/102.jpg
9The Geometric Period, http//www.uwm.edu/Course/my
thology/0100/101.jpg
http//www.hellenic-art.com/pottery/geo2.htm
10The Archaic Period
Black Figure In black-figure pottery, areas of
black, red and white are painted as a substrate
for the figures which, after firing, are enhanced
by incising the outlines into the red surface.
http//www.beloit.edu/arthist/historyofart/greek/
blackfigure.htm
"Achilles and Ajax playing a dice game," c. 530
bce. http//www.accd.edu/sac/vat/arthistory/arts13
03/Greek2.htm
11Hercules with his hands on the lions neck
http//carlos.emory.edu/ODYSSEY/GREECE/herkreps.ht
ml
12ca. 510 BC Athena and Herakles
http//www.beloit.edu/arthist/historyofart/greek
/blackfigure.htm
13The Classical Period red figure
Red Figure (c. 530-450 BC) negative version of
Black Figure. Red-figure pottery was made by
first painting the outlines of the figures, then
providing the details, then painting the grounds.
Because the brush is easier to control than an
engraving tool, red- figure vases tend to be more
detailed than black-figure
http//www.beloit.edu/arthist/historyofart/greek/
redfigure.htm
14The Classical Period red figure
Heracles fighting the Nemean Lion. After ruining
all his weapons on the lion's impervious hide,
Heracles must choke the monster to death.
Afterwards he wears its skull as a helmet and its
skin for a cloak. ca. 490 b.c.http//www.museum.u
penn.edu/Greek_World/pottery_big-07.html
15http//www.uwm.edu/Course/mythology/0100/107.jpg
16The Classical Period white ground
- (c. 450-400 BC) grave ornamentation
- White-ground pottery was made by first painting
the outlines of the figures, then providing the
details, then painting the grounds in white.
(http//www.beloit.edu/arthist/historyofart/greek
/whiteground.htm)
http//www.uark.edu/campus-resources/dlevine/Relig
ionImages.html
17seated Apollo holding lyre, pouring libation.
Greek, 480-70 BCE
http//www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/apolloc
up2.jpg
18ca. 460 BC Women with funerary gifts
http//www.beloit.edu/arthist/historyofart/greek/
whiteground.htm
19- Greek Sculpture
- (See student presentation)
20http//www2.spsu.edu/cteacad/bseaboltx/2001/Greek/
sld009.htm
21- Contrapposto Italian word for "set against". A
method developed by the Greeks to represent
freedom of movement in a figure. The parts of the
body are placed asymmetrically in opposition to
each other around a central axis, and careful
attention is paid to the distribution of weight.
http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture
9.html
22http//www2.spsu.edu/cteacad/bseaboltx/2001/Greek/
sld011.htm
23Myron, Diskobolos (Discus Thrower), 460-450
B.C.E. Marble copy of a bronze original, 5' high.
Museo delle Terme, Rome. Scala/Art Resource, NY.
24Poseidon/Zeus, found in the sea off Cape
Artemision, c. 450 B.C.E. Bronze, 6'10 1/4".
National Archaeological Museum, Athens. Scala/Art
Resource, NY.
25Warrior from Riace, c. 450 B.C.E. Bronze with
bone, glass paste, and copper inlay, 6 4/5" high.
Museo Nazionale, Reggio Calabria, Italy.
Scala/Art Resource, NY.
26The caryatid porch of the Erechtheum, sourth
side, 421-407 BC, Acropolis, Athens. Scala/Art
Resource, NY.
27Praxiteles, Aphrodite of Knidos, Roman copy of
Greek original of c. 350 B.C.E. Marble, 6' 8 3/4"
high. Musei Vaticani, Rome. Nimatallah/Art
Resource, NY.
28 29Relief of birth of Aphrodite from the genitals of
Uranus, rising from the sea assisted by the two
Horae. Ludovisi Throne, ca 470-460 BC, Altemps
Museum, Rome. http//www.vroma.org/images/raia_ima
ges/ludovisi.throne.jpg
30The so-called 'Mourning Athena'. Leaning on her
spear with the left hand, her body slightly
inclined forward, she bends her head and
contemplates the stele standing before her. This
latter may have been a stele marking out the
boundaries of the sacred precinct of the goddess,
or a list of casualties in war. Severe style. c.
460 BCE. Athens Acropolis Museum.
http//www.uark.edu/campus-resources/dlevine/Relig
ionImages.html
31Lapith overcoming a centaur, south metope 27,
Parthenon, Athens, 447-438 BCE. Marble, height 4
ft. 5 in. http//ccwf.cc.utexas.edu/kallet/gree
ce/pictures.html
32- The centaurs were a fabulous race of half human
and half horse creatures from untamed regions of
Thessaly. They were invited to attend the wedding
of the king of their neighbors, the Lapiths. In
the midst of the wedding the centaurs became
drunk and disorderly and attempted to abduct
Hippodamia, the bride of Peirthoös. In the
ensuing battle the Lapiths overcome the centaurs.
The centaurs as both being half human and being
in a state of drunkenness are clearly set off
from the Lapiths. The wild ferocity of the
centaur is here contrasted to the restrained
expression of the Lapith. The popularity of this
subject matter in Greek Archaic and Classical art
can be explained by its theme of order or cosmos
overcoming chaos and a series of related
binaries reason and self-control overcoming
immoderate passion, culture overcoming nature,
civilization overcoming barbarism, human techné
(technology) harnessing wild, animal forces of
nature, and Greek defeating non-Greek. - http//employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/arth200
/politics/images_authority_2_greek.html
33 34- I call architecture frozen music. (Goethe)
35Parthenon, Athens, 447-436 BCE
http//www.willamette.edu/cla/wviews/slides.cgi?p1
36(No Transcript)
37http//lilt.ilstu.edu/drjclassics/sites/acropolis/
0075.htm
38Varied Uses in History
- 436 BCE Completed
- Late 6th century Converted into a Christian
church - 1458 Turned into a mosque
- 1687 A Venetian shell exploded the gunpowder
stored by the Turks in it.
(J. Glancey, The Story of Architecture, DK, 2000)
39http//lilt.ilstu.edu/drjclassics/sites/acropolis/
acropolis.shtm
40Athena Parthenos, c. 438 BC. Model of the lost
statue. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.http//www.
msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture10.html
41Parthenon A Symbolic Temple
- Represented all the core values that held the
Greek civilization together - A place of gathering and worship
- A Greek warship (the basis of Greek power)
- A domestic loom (the root of every Greek
household) - The people themselves
- (J. Glancey, The Story of Architecture, DK, 2000)
42Greek Warship
http//www.artsales.com/ARTistory/Ancient_Ships/im
ages/Greek_27.gif
43A domestic loom
http//www.mythinglinks.org/WomenWeavingTLGAofM86
r50s6more.jpg
44The Greek Orders
- (1) Doric
- (2) Ionic
- (3) Corinthian
45Doric Referred to as "basic order." Most plain
of orders. Emphasis on stability and
grace. Massive and weighty. Serious and
masculine. http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art10
1/101lecture10.html
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
doric1.jpg
46Doric entablature
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
doric2.jpg
47Doric NYC Custom House, 1834
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
doric-nycustom.jpg
48Taiwan Provincial Museum, Taipei
49Fu Yard, NTU, Taipei
50Ionic Fairly fluid style. Strong Near Eastern
influence. Light and graceful http//www.msjc.ed
u/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture10.html
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
ionic1.jpg
51http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
ionic2.jpg
52Ionic entablature
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
entablat.jpg
53Temple of Athena Nike, Acropolis, Athens, c. 421
- 405 BC
http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture
10.html
54The Erechtheum, Akropolis, Athens. 421 - 405 BC
http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture
10.html
55Ionic University of Virginia, 1819-26
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
ionic-uva.jpg
56(No Transcript)
57Corinthian Complex, organic decoration Capitals
usually composed of curly shoots and leaves of
the acanthus plant Suggest delicacy and
femininity Became the standard capital for Roman
architects http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art10
1/101lecture10.html
http//intranet.grundel.nl/thinkquest/order2.jpg
58Corinthian entablature
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
corinthian1.jpg
59University of Virginia, 1819-26
http//www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/arch/greek/
corinthian-uva.jpg
60The New York Public Library, New York City
http//ah.phpwebhosting.com/a/DCTNRY/p/pallad/
61- The three types of columns were developments of
the Egyptian columns, which symbolized bunches of
reed tied together. The capitals of Greek columns
were, again, representations of natural forms, as
in the rams horns of the Ionic or the stylized
acanthus leaves of the Corinthian.
(J. Glancey, The Story of Architecture, DK, 2000)
62- The Hellenic Age
- (800 BCE - 323 BCE)
- The Hellenistic Age
- (323 BCE - 30 BCE)
- The Greco-Roman Age
- (30 BCE - 476 CE)
63 64Philip II
- 359-336 BCE
- 338 BCE Defeated Athens.
- Greek city-states lost independence.
65Alexander
- 336-323 B.C.E.
- Greeks ? the Sacker of Cities
- Romans ? Alexander the Great
66Alexander
- 331 B.C.E. Defeated the Persian army.
- Contributions Spread Greek civilization from
the Aegean to the Indus River.
67Empire of Alexander the Great 336-323 BCE
http//arapahoe.littletonpublicschools.net/Portals
/7/Social20Studies/Crosby/WesternCiv/Unit2/Unit2
02.520Hellenistic20Empire20Map.ppt
68The Battle of Issos or Battle of Alexander and
the Persians. Mosaic copy from Pompeii of a
Hellenistic painting of c. 315 BC.
http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lectur
e10.html
69(No Transcript)
70(No Transcript)
71(No Transcript)
72http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture
10.html
73http//www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/images/art20101
20images/chapter205/alexandercoin.jpg
74- Alexander the Great was depicted in Greek coinage
as ram-headed, (Arabic Zul-Qarnain, Lord of two
horns) indicating he was regarded as a living
deity while yet a man.
http//khidr.org/gaffar.htm
75http//wps.ablongman.com/wps/media/objects/262/268
312/art/figures/KISH_03_66.gif
76Hellenistic Kingdoms
- Ptolemaic Egypt
- Seleucid Persia
- Antigonid
- Macedonia-Greece
77- Philosophy of the Hellenistic Age
78Hellenistic Philosophy
- Skepticism Cynicism
- Epicureanism Stoicism
-
79Hellenistic Philosophy
- All of them placed the personal needs and
emotion of the individual over and above the good
of the community
80Skepticism
- All knowledge is derived from sense perception
and therefore must be limited and relative. - Happiness results from suspension of judgment.
- Ideal escape from the world
81Cynicism
- Characterized by a cynical criticism of customs,
institutions and religious opinions, coupled with
a withdrawal into a private sphere, free of
social constraints - Back to nature self-reliance
82Epicureanism (1)
- Based on the materialistic atomism
- Since there is no ultimate purpose in the
universe, the highest good is pleasure.
83- Pleasure is our first and kindred good. It is
the starting-point of every choice and of every
aversion, and to it we come back, inasmuch as we
make feeling the rule by which to judge of every
good thing. - Letter to Menoeceus, http//www.benthamlinks.com/E
picurus/
84Epicureanism (2)
- Happiness results from avoiding all forms of
physical excess. - The state is a mere convenience the wise man
should take no active part in politics.
85Stoicism (1)
- The cosmos is an ordered whole in which all
contradictions are resolved for ultimate good. - Everything that happens is rigidly determined in
accordance with rational purpose.
86Stoicism (2)
- The highest good is serenity of mind.
- Duty and self-discipline were cardinal virtues.
- Taught egalitarianism, pacifism, and
humanitarianism.
87 88The Dying Gaul, 230 BCE
89Aphrodite of Melos (also called Venus de Milo),
c. 150 B.C.E. Marble, height 6' 10". Musée du
Louvre, Paris. Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY.
90Pythocritos of Rhodes. Winged Nike (Winged
Victory), from Samothrace, c. 190 B.C.E. Marble,
approx. 8' high. Louvre, Paris. Réunion des
Musées Nationaux/Art Resource, NY.
91Laocoön and His Two Sons, Roman copy, late 1st
century B.C.E.-early 1st century C.E., of a
Hellenistic statue. Marble, 7' high. Musei
Vaticani, Rome. The figures of Laocoön and his
son on the viewer's left are Roman copies. The
boy on our right is a Roman addition.
Nimatallah/Art Resource, NY.
92Old Market Woman, 2nd century BCE
93Sculpture
- Moving from idealism to realism
- Depicting ordinary people in scenes of daily life
- Extravagance, dramatic, sentimental
94The Altar of Zeus in the Pergamon Museum, Berlin.
The Pergamon Altar is a magnificently opulent
structure originally built in the 2nd century BC
in the Ancient Greek city of Pergamon (modern day
Bergama in Turkey). It has long been assumed that
the temple was dedicated to Zeus.
http//jdc.math.uwo.ca/images/world/r10-berlin-bel
gium/img13.html
95http//www.artchive.com/artchive/g/greek/greek_zeu
s.jpg
96- The Altar of Zeus was constructed by Eumenes II
(197-159 BC) and after his death by Attalus II as
a memorial of the victory against the Galatians
and taking the Acropolis of Athens as an example.
The frieze sculptures show the fight of the gods,
who finally are victorious, against the giants
(gigantes) (Gigantomachy). The giants (around
100) are the sons of the mother Earth Gaea (or
Gaia). It is a victory finally by Zeus over Gaea
and in this way he ends the matriarchal epoch and
establishes a patriarchal government order and
culture. - http//www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Arts/ZeusAltar.htm
97Athena Battling with Alkyoneus, from the frieze
of the Altar of Zeus, east section, c. 180 B.C.E.
Marble, 7' 6" high. Antikensammlung, Staatliche
Museen, Berlin.
98Conclusion
- Two aspects of Hellenistic culture
- --cosmopolitanism
- --modernity
-
99