Funerary Vase (Krater), Dipylon Cemetery, or Dipylon Vase

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Art of the Greek Golden Age. Before we look at Greek art, we need to know WHAT to look for and HOW to interpret what we see. WHAT do you see in the image.
Advertisements

Complied by : Rani Pillai
Greek Sculpture Periods of Greek Sculpture:
Ancient Greece. Map Consumer Goods Coins Alphabet.
Ancient Greek Art Part 3. Classical Sculpture BCE.
GREEK BODIES. ` Aphrodite of Knidos, Praxitiles, Late Classical, 350 BCE.
The Parthenon - Athens.
Greek Art Introduction Periods Painting Pottery Sculpture Architecture Malaspina Great Books.
The Archaic Period 620 to 490/80 BCE. The Archaic Period was the time when Aesop was writing his fables as a Greek slave. Artists competed for commissions.
Greek Vase Painting Geometric/Orientalizing Review Black-figure Red – figure White - ground.
The Art of Ancient Greece c BCE. MapofAncientGreece.
A R T O F A N C I E N T G R E E C E CHAPTER 5. KEY TERMS Sanctuaries Rosettes Black-figure Red-figure Olpe Caryatids/Atlantids Kantharos Symposium Contrapposto.
Review Exam II Greek and Roman Art. Exam 7 slides (10/each) ID:subject, date, period date, country, facts Comparison and Contrast (30 points; 2 slides);
Gardner’s Art Through the Ages, 13e
Compartive Civilizations 12 Greek Sculpture K.J. Benoy.
Greek Vase Painting.
Greek Art History. GreeceWe are here Thera (Modern Day Santorini)
Art of Ancient Greece What you must memorize.. Terms and Stuff city-state -- a polis an autonomous region having a city as its political, cultural, religious,
Major Periods 1.Geometric Period BCE 2.Orientalizing Period BCE 3.Archaic Period BCE Athens has a representative government; every.
Ancient Greek Architecture
1 Classical Greece and It’s Aftermath. 2 The Art of Greece The Periods The Cretan Period BC The Mycenaean Age BC Geometrical Period.
Ancient Greece Unknown period of history of Greece from end of Mycenaean civilization to Classical civilization- approximately BCE Steady, unbroken.
Art History 4 Ancient Greek Art. Greek Art Timeline
Greek, Athenian Statue of a Kouros, B. C. E. marble, H
Chapter 5 Classical Period.
CLASSICIAL STYLE. N.B. the Etruscan area in Northern Italy, which is critical for all Western civilization!
Differences? Archaic Hellenic Hellenistic.
Chapter 5: Ancient Greece
Greek Art The Classical Ideal. The Painted Ladies.
Greek Art Introduction:
Mini-Project Assignment:
The Art of Ancient Greece c BCE. MapofAncientGreece.
1 The Greek World. EARLY GREECE ARCHAIC PERIOD CLASSICAL: Early High Late HELLENISTIC 2.
ANCIENT GREECE GARDINER CHAPTER 5-4 PP CLASSICAL SCULPTURE  Early Classical sculptors break away from the rigid and unnatural Egyptian-inspired.
The Art of Ancient Greece c BCE. MapofAncientGreece.
1 Early Greek Art and Architecture. 2 The Art of Greece The Periods The Cretan Period BC The Mycenaean Age BC Geometrical Period – The.
The Archaic Period 620 to 490/80 BCE. Temple Architecture – use book 1.stylobate 2.fluting 3.capital 4.volute 5.Doric order 6.Ionic order 7.pediment 8.frieze.
Greek Art & architecture. Standing Youth (kouros) 600 bc Metropolitan Museum of art nyc.
The Art of Ancient Greece
GREEK ART. Iktinos and Kallikrates, BC. The Parthenon, Classical Period, Marble, 228 ft. X 104 ft., Columns 34 ft. H., Athens.
Greek Art Stokstad Chapter 5. Greek Art 1:Geometric to Archaic Periods 5.5 Funerary vase (Krater), from the Dipylon Cemetery, Athens. C BCE.
Greek Visual Art Sculpture & Architecture. Archaic Beginnings of realism Contrapposto: naturalistic/one leg carries the weight, one leg free Read pg.
Greek Art Geometric, Transitional, Classical, and Hellenistic.
Greek Art Chapter 5. Geometric Period Very typical of this period were large funerary vases designed to hold votive offerings Decoration was primarily.
The Archaic Period 620 to 490/80 BCE.
"Kritios Boy" c.480 bce from the Acropolis, Athens. Parian marble, 33 7/8" high. "Kritios Boy" is an early fine example of "contrapposto" a term that describes.
Greek Art 600 BCE – 30 BCE. Enduring Understanings  Characterized by a pantheon of gods  Studied chronologically, according to style changes  Idealization.
Hellenism. 2 Figure 5-74 PAIONIOS OF EPHESOS and DAPHNIS OF MILETOS, Temple of Apollo, Didyma, Turkey, begun 313 BCE. Restored view of facade (right)
Peplos Kore from the Acropolis, Athens, Greece ca. 530 B.C.E. marble 48 in. high.
Ancient Greek Art UNIT 5. The Greek World Geometric krater from the Dipylon cemetery, Athens, Greece, 740 BCE Figure painting reappeared in Greece in.
Hook Can Mickey Mouse Go Outside And Chase Hogs Artistic Period Cycladic Minoan Mycenaean Geometric Orientalizing Archaic Classical Hellenistic Prehistoric.
Ancient Greek Art and Architecture. Greek Architecture ParthenonAcropolis Statue of Athena Public buildings ColumnsMarbleFrieze.
GREEK AND ROMAN ART GREEK ART. Greek art. The birthplace and the zenith of Western Art Proportion, balance, unity- KEY IDEALS Harmony and idealized beauty.
Kouros, marble, 6 ft. 4 in., c. 600 BCE (Metropolitan Museum) Peplos Kore, marble, 4 ft., c. 530 BCE (Acropolis Museum)
Much of Greek art was centered on: a. The human figure and human experiences b. City life versus Farm life c. The family tree of the gods d. Roman art.
Shape: a geometric or organic area contained within an implied line that has length and width. (2-D) Form: a 3-D enclosed area or object.
Chapter Two Ancient Greece.
Greek Art Chapter 5.
Entered through memorial gate , Parsanoss.
ARCHAIC GREECE.
Greek Art The Classical Ideal.
Classical Greece.
Greek Art Ancient Mediterranean
Ancient Greek Art and Architecture
Sculpture and Ancient Greece
Ancient Greece Unknown period of history of Greece from end of Mycenaean civilization to Classical civilization-approximately BCE Steady, unbroken.
Ancient Greece Unknown period of history of Greece from end of Mycenaean civilization to Classical civilization-approximately BCE Steady, unbroken.
Sculpture and Ancient Greece
Sculpture and Ancient Greece
Why the nude? What should we try to read?
Presentation transcript:

Funerary Vase (Krater), Dipylon Cemetery, or Dipylon Vase Artist: Attributed to the Hirschfeld Workshop Medium: Ceramic, 42” high Date: c. 750–700 BCE, GEOMETRIC PERIOD Source/Museum: Dipylon Cemetery, Athens / The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Used as a grave marker near Athens Mourners tearing hair with grief Geometric patterns, shapes representing mourners (not realistic) Note: no reference to afterlife (like on Egyptian funerary art) Artist: Attributed to the Hirschfeld Workshop Title: Funerary Vase (Krater) Medium: Ceramic Size: height 42 ⅝" (108 cm) Date: c. 750–700 BCE Source/Museum: Dipylon Cemetery, Athens / The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Rogers Fund, 1914 (14.130.14)

Title: Corinthian Olpe (Pitcher) Artist: n/a Title: Corinthian Olpe (Pitcher) Medium: Ceramic with black-figure decoration Size: height 11 ½" Date: c. 600 BCE Orientalizing Period Source/Museum: Corinth / The British Museum, London Significance: Black figure vase Shows Eastern/Oriental influence with motifs of imaginary animals, plant forms, from Near East, Asia Minor & Egypt Artist: n/a Title: Pitcher (Olpe) Medium: Ceramic with black-figure decoration Size: height 11 ½" (30 cm) Date: c. 600 BCE Source/Museum: Corinth / The British Museum, London

Title: The Suicide of Ajax Artist: Exekias Title: The Suicide of Ajax Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration, 27" high (69 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Archaic Period Source/Museum: Château-Musée, Boulogne-sur-Mer, France Stunning composition with shape of figure echoing form of vase, balanced between uprights of shield & tree. Shows drama of moment when Ajax will throw himself on his sword. Black figure ceramic. Artist: Exekias Title: The Suicide of Ajax Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration Size: height of amphora 27" (69 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Source/Museum: Château-Musée, Boulogne-sur-Mer, France

Artist: Euphronios (painter) and Euxitheos (potter) Title: Death of Sarpedon Ceramic calyx krater with red-figure decoration, 18" high Date: c. 515 BCE, Archaic Period Source/Museum: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Euphronius best known red figure artist, illustrating a story from the Iliad, Sleep & Death carry dead Trojan warrior from battlefield Balanced composition, rhythm of decorative bands echoing the shape of the body and Hermes, guide to the Underworld Foreshorteing … such as Sarpedon’s left leg Artist: Euphronios (painter) and Euxitheos (potter) Title: Death of Sarpedon Medium: Ceramic calyx krater with red-figure decoration Size: height of krater 18" (45.7 cm) Date: c. 515 BCE Source/Museum: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Not a flashcard but be familiar with this … what type of building Artist: n/a Title: Reconstruction Drawing of the Treasury of the Siphnians, Delphi Sanctuary of Apollo, Delphi. c. 530–525 BCE Medium: n/a Size: n/a Date: n/a Source/Museum: n/a Not a flashcard but be familiar with this … what type of building Treasury of the Siphnians, Delphi Sanctuary of Apollo, c. 530-525 BCE archaic period; filled with relief pedients, caryatids acting as columns, varying depth of relief.

Title: Anavysos Kouros Medium: Marble with remnants of paint Size: height 6'4" (1.93 m) Date: c. 530 BCE - Archaic Period Source/Museum: Cemetery at Anavysos, near Athens / National Archaeological Museum, Athens Significance: More naturalistic than New York Kouros (Standing Youth)… Archaic style-wiglike hair, archaic smile, stiffly posed showing Egyptian influence Male statues always nude (female Kore statues usually wore clothing) Originally on a grave, inscription honoring fallen war hero killed by Ares the war god Artist: n/a Title: Anavysos Kouros Medium: Marble with remnants of paint Size: height 6'4" (1.93 m) Date: c. 530 BCE Source/Museum: Cemetery at Anavysos, near Athens / National Archaeological Museum, Athens

Dying Warrior, artist unknown Medium: Marble, about 6’long Date: c. 500–490 BCE, Archaic Period..West pediment marked end of Archaic period, more into early classical, East pediment is more rigid sculptures Source/Museum: Temple of Aphaia, Aegina (now located in Munich) Set standard for pediment sculpture, twisted form turning in space, fitting corner of triangle Artist: n/a Title: Dying Warrior Medium: Marble Size: length 6' (1.83 m) Date: c. 500–490 BCE Source/Museum: Sculpture from the left corner of the east pediment of the Temple of Aphaia, Aegina / Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek, Munich

Shows fragments reconstructed including the Dying Warrior Note the triangular composition

Marks beginning of Early Classical Period, transitioning away from rigid archaic poses and geometric shapes Artist: n/a Title: Kritian Boy Medium: Marble Size: height 3'10" (1.17 m) Date: c. 480 BCE Source/Museum: From Acropolis, Athens / Acropolis Museum, Athens Kritian Boy, Marble, 3’10”, 480 BCE Early Classical, Kritios?, contrapossto, natural pose, lifelike. Found in Acropolis.

Spear Bearer (doryphoros, Achilles) Polykleitos, Roman Copy of orig. bronze 450 BCE 6’11” Illustrated Polykleitos canon of proportions which included symmetria, relationship of weight bearing and non weight bearing leg Dynamically balanced pose (spear is lost) Artist: Polykleitos Title: Spear Bearer (Doryphoros), also known as Achilles Medium: Marble (tree trunk and brace strut are Roman additions) Size: height 6'11" (2.12 m) Date: Roman copy after the original bronze of c. 450–440 BCE Source/Museum: National Archeological Museum, Naples

Found in sea near Riace, Italy Riace Warrior, Artist Unknown High Classical period 460-450 BCE Found in sea near Riace, Italy Impossibly idealized musculature Detailed glass eyes, silver teeth, copper lips Face is of older man, body of idealized Greek athlete (We saw these in Art Made the World, remember?) Artist: n/a Title: Warrior A (back) Medium: Bronze with bone and glass eyes, silver teeth, and copper lips and nipples. Size: height 6'9" (2.05 m) Date: c. 460–450 BCE Source/Museum: Found in the sea off Riace, Italy / National Archeological Museum, Reggio Calabria, Italy

Title: Discus Thrower (Diskobolos) Medium: Marble Artist: Myron Title: Discus Thrower (Diskobolos) Medium: Marble Size: height 5'11" (1.55 m) Date: Roman copy after the original bronze of c. 450 BCE (classical period) Source/Museum: National Museum, Rome Idealized Olympic athlete Balanced form Humanism philosophy Closed vs. open, curves vs. angles, moment of tension Artist: Myron Title: Discus Thrower (Diskobolos) Medium: Marble Size: height 5'11" (1.55 m) Date: Roman copy after the original bronze of c. 450 BCE Source/Museum: National Museum, Rome

Flashcard image (Temple of Athena Nike)

Nike Adjusting Her Sandal, Artist unknown Marble, 3’6”, 410 BCE High Classical Fragment of relief decoration from Temple of Athena Nike, Acropolis, Athens Temple was built amphiprostyle plan with porch at each end, Ionic style Wings balance her pose Virtuoso sculptor of the clingy drapery as Nike balances to adjust her shoe Artist: n/a Title: Nike (Victory) Adjusting Her Sandal Medium: Marble Size: height 3' 6" (1.06 m) Date: Last quarter of the 5th century (perhaps 410–405) BCE Source/Museum: Fragment of relief decoration from the parapet (now destroyed), Temple of Athena Nike, Acropolis, Athens / Acropolis Museum, Athens

Model of the Acropolis, 447-432 BCE - Recognize this area. Artist: n/a Title: Model of the Acropolis, Athens Medium: n/a Size: n/a Date: c. 447–432 BCE Source/Museum: Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto

Artist: Kallikrates and Iktinos Title: Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens. View from the Northwest. Medium: Pantelic marble Size: n/a Date: 447–432 BCE Source/Museum: n/a The Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens. Nw View, 447-432 BCE, Kalikrates & Iktinos Proportions 4:9, balanced views, narrowing space of corner columns. Glorified Athens and Athena, masterpiece of sculpture/architecture, Marble. Pediment sculpture only survives in fragments. Independence, self confidence, pride. Inspired architecture worldwide, including 19th century US. Symbolizeds human ideals.

Artist: n/a Title: Erechtheion. View From The East. Porch of The Maidens At Left; North Porch Can Be Seen Through The Columns of The East Wall Medium: n/a Size: n/a Date: 421–406 BCE Source/Museum: Acropolis, Athens Erechtheion. View From The East. Porch of The Maidens At Left; North Porch Can Be Seen Through The Columns of The East Wall 421-406 BCE Acropolis, Athens

Erechtheion, Acropolis, Athens. Porch of the Maidens 420 BCE, CLASSICAL PERIOD KNOWN FOR CARATYID COLUMNS in classical poses, closure symmetry and rhythm Erected under Perikles building programs to revitalize Athens Mythical location where Poseidon and Athena had a contest over who would rule Athens Artist: n/a Title: Porch of The Maidens (South Porch), Erechtheion Medium: n/a Size: n/a Date: Temple 430s–406 BCE; porch c. 420–410 BCE Source/Museum: Acropolis, Athens

Aphrodite of Knidos, Praxiteles Marble, 6’8” high, (Roman copy) 350 BCE (Late Classical) Presently located in Vatican museum, Rome 1st Greek female nude goddess (other female nudes were courtesans, etc.) Humanized mature woman, ready to bathe, everyday activity rather than idealized battle scene or athletic event. Possibly merging Babylonian goddess Ishtar with Aphrodite, Ishtar was almost always shown Nude Gradual acceptance of female nudes in Greek art Artist: Praxiteles Title: Aphrodite of Knidos Medium: Marble Size: height 6'8" (2.04 m) Date: Composite of two similar Roman copies after the original marble of c. 350 BCE Source/Museum: Vatican Museums, Museo Pio Clementino, Gabinetto delle Maschere, Rome

Temple of the Olympian Zeus, Athens Corinthian columns Built & rebuilt during 520 BCE to 132 CE Artist: n/a Title: Temple of the Olympian Zeus, Athens; Acropolis in Distance Medium: n/a Size: Height of columns 55"5" (16.89 m) Date: Building and rebuilding phases: foundation c. 520–510 BCE using the Doric order; temple designed by Cossutius, begun 175 BCE, left unfinished 164 BCE, completed 132 CE using Cossutius’s design and the Corinthian order Source/Museum: n/a

Dying Gallic Trumpeter (flashcard) Epigonos? 220 bce Sanctuary of Athena in Pergamon Expressionism characteristic of Hellenistic art Gauls were Celtic people conquered during this period Roman copy from garden of Julius Caesar Artist: Epigonos (?) Title: Dying Gallic Trumpeter (back) Medium: Marble Size: height, 36½" (93 cm) Date: Roman copy after the original bronze of c. 220 BCE Source/Museum: Capitoline Museum, Rome

Flashcard Image Original 2nd century BCE Maybe Roman copy Pergamene style - complex composition illustrating episode from Trojan War… Laocon told Trojans to beware Greeks bearing gifts (Trojan Horse) Gods retaliated….

Nike (Victory) of Samothrace Marble, 8’ high 180 BCE Hellenestic Period Located in Louvre, Paris Pergamene style, very theatrical Heavy wings balance forward thrust of body Masterpiece with draperies, motion Commemorates military victory at sea (landing on ship’s prow) Artist: n/a Title: Nike (Victory) of Samothrace Medium: Marble Size: height 8'1" (2.45 m) Date: c. 180 BCE (?) Source/Museum: Sanctuary of the Great Gods, Samothrace / Musée du Louvre, Paris

Aphrodite of Melos (Venus de Milo) Marble, 150-100 BCE, Hellenestic Artist unknown Located at Louvre Renewed interest in styles of Praxiteles and Lysippos, heavier proportion of High Classical period but twisting perspective of Hellenestic period Drapery falling off gives note of erotic tension Artist: n/a Title: Aphrodite of Melos (Also Called Venus de Milo) Medium: Marble Size: height 6'8" (2.04 m) Date: c. 150–100 BCE Source/Museum: Musée du Louvre, Paris