Bellwork - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 103
About This Presentation
Title:

Bellwork

Description:

Greek Culture. Gods. Human (anthropomorphized) Immortal but with human form & flaws ... the enormous debt Greek civilization owed to the earlier great cultures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:138
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 104
Provided by: robe3
Category:
Tags: bellwork | gods | greek

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bellwork


1
Bellwork
  • List 2 things you already know about the Greeks
    their culture
  • List 1 thing you still want to learn
  • List one way in which the Greeks have influenced
    American art or architecture.

2
Todays Objective
  • I will be able to analyze the stylistic
    conventions of Cycladic, Minoan, and Mycenaean
    art and architecture

3
Analyze
  • To break apart

4
  • Vocabulary

5
Cultural Context
  • Geography
  • Timeline Events

6
Geography
7
Geography
Mycenae
Cyclades
Crete
8
Timeline
  • 3000 Cycladic Minoan cultures begin
  • 1700 - Linear Script A
  • 1600 Mycenaean culture begins
  • 1450 Widespread destruction on Crete
  • 1400 Linear Script B
  • 1200 Destruction of Mycenaean palaces
  • 1100 End of Pre-Historic cultures

9
Cultural Notes
  • Prosperous due to sea trade
  • Sea also provided defense
  • Development of palaces
  • Development of written language
  • Unique cultures

10
ART OBJECTS
11
Cycladic
12
Cycladic
  • Lots of marble
  • Naxos Paros
  • Very abstract, geometric
  • Smooth, polished texture
  • Some were painted
  • Appear very modern today
  • Mostly nude women with arms crossed

13
Figurine of a woman
  • Syros (Cyclades)
  • Circa 2500-2300 BCE
  • Marble
  • Approx. 1' 6 high

14
(No Transcript)
15
Figurine of a woman
  • Grave site (offering)
  • Flat, idealized
  • Geometric (triangles)
  • Proportions
  • The dead or fertility?

16
Male lyre player
  • Keros (Cyclades)
  • Circa 2700-2500 BCE
  • Marble
  • Approx. 9 high

17
(No Transcript)
18
Male lyre player
  • Geometric
  • Flat, idealized
  • Playing for the dead?
  • Bill on lyre?
  • Swan was the animal of Apollo
  • The lyre was his instrument

19
Minoan
20
Minoan
  • Island of Crete
  • Palaces around 2000 BCE
  • Kings, priestesses, etc.
  • Destruction around 1700
  • Rebuilding comes shortly afterwards
  • Golden age of Crete
  • first great Western civilization!
  • Gardners, p. 81

21
Minoan
  • Palaces
  • Royal homes, commercial centers, also religious
    and artistic centers
  • Large, comfortable, handsome
  • Staircases, courtyards, theaters
  • Storerooms, offices, shrines, etc.
  • Ashlar masonry stones set in clay Light and
    ventilation
  • Bathrooms!!

22
The Minotaur
23
(No Transcript)
24
Bull-Leaping fresco
  • Palace at Knossos (Crete)
  • Circa 1450-1400 BCE
  • Fresco
  • Approx. 2' 8 high

25
(No Transcript)
26
Bull
27
Bull-Leaping
  • Dark skinned boy
  • Light skinned girls
  • Profile with frontal eye (Mes. Egypt)
  • Curly hair waist
  • Line and shape of the bull suggests motion
    energy

28
Snake Goddess
  • Palace at Knossos
  • Circa 1600 BCE
  • Faience
  • Approx. 1' high

29
(No Transcript)
30
Snake Goddess
  • No evidence of large temples or statues to gods
  • Frontal
  • Fertility
  • Mortal vs. goddess?
  • Snakes a leopard
  • Power over animals

31
Mycenaean
32
Mycenaean
  • Whered they come from?
  • Came late, but flourished fast
  • Became most powerful after destruction of Crete
    (Minoans)
  • Advanced architecture
  • Defense
  • Cyclopean masonry
  • Corbels

33
Tholos tomb
  • Mycenae, Greece
  • Circa 1300-1250 BCE
  • Approx. 43' high

34
(No Transcript)
35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
(No Transcript)
39
Tholos tomb
  • Tholos tomb
  • a beehive-shaped tomb with a circular plan
  • Tholoi (pl.)
  • Corbeled
  • vs. post lintel or arch

40
Tholos tomb
  • Cyclopean masonry
  • A method of stone construction using massive,
    irregular blocks without mortar
  • Named after the mythical one-eyed giants, the
    Cyclopes

41
Tholos tomb
  • Covered under earth
  • Finished surface inside
  • Very sophisticated
  • Largest know vaulted space without interior
    supports until the Roman Pantheon
  • 1500 years later
  • Used concrete

42
Warrior Vase
  • Mycenae, Greece
  • Circa 1200 BCE
  • Approx. 1' 4 high

43
(No Transcript)
44
Warrior Vase
  • Krater
  • An ancient Greek wide-mouthed bowl for mixing
    wine and water
  • Soldiers marching off to war
  • Woman bids goodbye

45
Warrior Vase
  • Groundline (frieze)
  • Rhythm
  • Front eye w/profile

46
(No Transcript)
47
Greek Culture
  • Gods
  • Human (anthropomorphized)
  • Immortal but with human form flaws
  • Remember, the human form is the most beautiful
    image to the Greeks

48
Greek Culture
  • Not a single people
  • Polis (poleis pl.)
  • Dorians of the north
  • Ionians in Turkey
  • Olympiad 776 BCE

49
Greek Culture
  • The Greeks Nothing New!!
  • the enormous debt Greek civilization owed to
    the earlier great cultures of Egypt and the Near
    East.
  • Gardners, p. 98

50
Geometric
51
Geometric
  • After the Mycenaean culture falls apart, a dark
    age comes
  • Loss of knowledge
  • Populations grows smaller
  • No contact with other cultures
  • Around 700 BCE, culture returns
  • Olympics
  • Trade
  • Formation of city states

52
Geometric
  • Return of the human figure
  • But very abstract

53
Geometric krater
  • Athens, Greece
  • Circa 740 BCE
  • Approx. 3' 4 high

54
(No Transcript)
55
Geometric krater
  • Marked a grave
  • Wealth of family
  • Open bottom
  • Registers
  • Honoring the dead
  • Narrative
  • Twisted perspective
  • Horses

56
Orientalizing
57
Corinthian black-figure amphora
  • Rhodes, Greece
  • Circa. 625-600 BCE
  • Approx. 1' 2" high

58
(No Transcript)
59
Corinthian black-figure amphora
  • Amphora (storage) vs. krater
  • Orientalizing
  • 700 600 BCE
  • A period where the Greeks were heavily influenced
    by the Near East and Egypt

60
Black-figure amphora
  • Corinthian
  • Registers
  • Animals
  • Eastern monsters
  • Black-figured painting
  • dark figures against a light background of
    reddish clay, with details incised

61
Mantiklos Apollo
  • Mantiklos
  • Thebes
  • Circa 700-680 BCE
  • Bronze

62
(No Transcript)
63
Mantiklos Apollo
  • Dedicated to Apollo
  • Artists name
  • Who is it?
  • Apollo?
  • Mantiklos?
  • Someone else?
  • Votive offering

64
Mantiklos Apollo
  • Triangular face and torso
  • Long neck
  • Attention to anatomy of body
  • Compare to Cylcadic
  • Orientalizing
  • Daedulas

65
Auxerre Kore
  • Auxerre, France
  • Circa. 650-625 BCE
  • Limestone
  • Approx. 2' high

66
(No Transcript)
67
Auxerre Kore
  • Kore
  • (korai pl.)
  • Greek, young woman
  • Statuette depicting a young woman or maiden

68
Auxerre Kore
  • Triangular face
  • Long hair
  • Skinny waist
  • Gesture of prayer
  • God or human?
  • Geometric pattern on her dress

69
Archaic
70
Peplos Kore
  • Acropolis
  • Athens, Greece
  • Circa. 530 BCE
  • Marble
  • Approx. 4' high

71
(No Transcript)
72
Peplos Kore
  • Peplos
  • Long wollen garment
  • Column like
  • Originally painted
  • All stone statues
  • Flesh natural color
  • Lips, eyes, hair, clothing, etc.
  • Pigment in hot wax

73
Peplos Kore
  • Archaic smile
  • Left arm projected forward
  • Ka-Aper?
  • Votive offering
  • Athena
  • Much more natural
  • Proportion
  • Face, hips, etc.

74
(No Transcript)
75
Kroisos
  • Anavysos, Greece
  • Circa 530 BCE
  • Marble
  • Approx. 6' 4" high

76
(No Transcript)
77
Kroisos
  • Kroisos
  • Actual person
  • Died _at_ 530 BCE in battle
  • Grave marker
  • Also painted

78
Kroisos
  • Kouros
  • Greek, young man
  • Statuette depicting a young man
  • Sometimes thought to be Apollo

79
Kroisos
  • Egyptian stance
  • Archaic smile
  • Proportion
  • Head
  • Neck
  • Arms Legs
  • Hair more natural
  • Softer muscles
  • Rounder hips

80
(No Transcript)
81
Two Main Differences
  • The Greek statues are nude
  • Again the beauty of the human body
  • 2. The figure is released from the stone it was
    carved from
  • Trys to represent motion

82
Ajax and Achilles playing a game
  • Exekias
  • Vulci, Italy
  • Circa. 540-530 BCE
  • Whole vessel approx. 2' high

83
(No Transcript)
84
Ajax and Achilles playing a game
  • Artists began to sign their vases
  • Painter vs. Potter
  • Exekias
  • Master of the black-figure tech.
  • Signed as both potter painter

85
Ajax and Achilles playing a game
  • Voices!
  • Ajax calls tesara
  • Achilles tria
  • No dramatic action
  • Yet armed and ready to go

86
Ajax and Achilles playing a game
  • Balance
  • Helmets
  • Shields
  • Spears
  • Bodies
  • Details
  • Patterns on cloaks
  • Archaic smile
  • Line
  • FRONTAL EYE

87
Revelers
  • EUTHYMIDES,
  • Amphora
  • Vulci, Italy
  • Circa 510 BCE
  • Approx. 2' high

88
(No Transcript)
89
Revelers
  • Red-figure painting
  • Light figures are created against a dark
    background by outlining with black slip
  • Details also drawn in with this slip

90
Revelers
  • Three drunken revelers
  • Unusual body positions
  • How the bodies are depicted
  • No overlapping
  • Mixed frontal profile
  • Foreshortening
  • OPTICAL

91
Revelers
  • Challenge to create appealing images from unusual
    and lesser views of the human body
  • Pride of the artist
  • Euthymides painted me as never Euphronios could
    do!

92
The Greek Temple
  • Has influenced a great deal of historical and
    modern architecture
  • Originally influenced by columned halls of Egypt
  • Hypostyle hall of Karnak?
  • Not many early ones exist today
  • Wood and mud brick
  • Archaic era
  • Built of limestone and marble

93
The Greek Temple
  • Not a gathering place
  • Altar was outside on east end
  • Temple was a shrine for the cult statue
  • House for the god or goddess
  • Sculpture was important
  • Part decoration
  • Part votive offering
  • Part narrative
  • Even the columns

94
The Greek Temple
  • THE ENTIRE TEMPLE IS CONSIDERED A WORK OF ART!

95
The Greek Temple
  • Symmetry
  • Compact
  • Geometric
  • Proportion
  • Length of side to width
  • 13 or _at_ 12
  • Also important in sculpture

96
Temple of Hera I
  • Paestum, Italy
  • Circa 550 BCE
  • Approx 80 wide, 170 long

97
(No Transcript)
98
(No Transcript)
99
Temple of Hera I
  • Basilica
  • A rectangular church or public building with an
    entrance at one end
  • Cella
  • The central room of an ancient temple where the
    cult statue stood

100
Temple of Hera I
  • Temple of Hera II stands nearby
  • Unusual feature
  • Central row of columns through the center of the
    cella
  • Caused problems
  • Cant see the statue of Hera from outside

101
Temple of Hera I
  • Columns
  • Surrounded by a colonnade
  • Heavy and close
  • Entasis
  • Swelling in the middle of column
  • Doric capitals
  • Seem squashed under weight of roof, etc.
  • Afraid of collapse?

102
(No Transcript)
103
Closure
  • Compare and Contrast 3 things about the Geometric
    and Archaic periods
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com