The art and architecture of Greece and the Greek colonies dating from about 1100 B.C.
to the 1st century B.C.
They have their roots in Aegean civilization, but their unique qualities have made them
among the strongest influences on subsequent Western art and architecture.
Characterized by the representation of living beings.
o concerned both with formal proportion and with the dynamics of action and
emotion.
o primary subject matter is the human figure
which may represent either gods or mortals; monsters, animals, and
plants are secondary.
chief themes of Greek art are taken from myth, literature, and daily life
Up until about 320 B.C., the primary function of architecture, painting, and large
sculpture was a public one
o being concerned with religious objects and the commemoration of important
secular events, such as athletic victories.
Greek architects usually worked in marble or limestone, using wood and tile for roofs.
o Sculptors carved marble and limestone, modelled clay, and cast works in
bronze.
Greek art and architecture are customarily divided into periods reflecting changes in
style. Chronological divisions in this article are as follows: (1) Geometric and
Orientalizing periods (c. 1100-650 B.C.); (2) Archaic period (c. 660-475 B.C.); (3)
Classical period (c. 475-323 B.C.); (4) Hellenistic period (c. 323-31 B.C.).
Parthenon
Red-Figure Pyxis
Red-figure painting on vases developed in Greece in the late 6th century BC. This
pyxis, or small casket, is painted with domestic scenes; here, a woman spins and
another holds a hand-loom. The piece dates from c. 430 BC.
Only small pieces of Geometric-period sculpture, in bronze and clay, have been found.
Architecture of the Geometric and Orientalizing periods consisted of simple structures
of mud brick and rubble.
Archaic period
Greek society expanded geographically and economically, greater wealth and foreign
contacts led to the development of formal architecture and monumental sculpture.
Both were made from the marble and limestone with which Greece was plentifully
endowed.
Temples housed images of the gods and were decorated with sculpture and paintings.
Painting also flourished on vases
o which were important articles of trade.
Sculpture
Inspired by the monumental stone sculpture of Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Greeks
began to carve in stone.
Strangford Apollo
The Strangford Apollo, a marble statue from Limnos, Greece, dating from c. 500
BC, is an example of the type of standing male nude statue called a kouros, one
of three types found in Archaic sculpture. Apollo, god of light, purity, and the sun,
was often depicted in ancient Greek art.
Anavyssos Kouros
This archaic Greek kouros, or standing youth, has the stiff posture characteristic
of kouros figures, with arms held straight and one leg extended slightly forward.
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The pose was influenced by Egyptian sculpture. Greek sculptors, however, were
more interested in individual features, and late archaic statues like the Anavyssos
Kouros shown here display greater realism than did their Egyptian predecessors.
This statue, which dates from around 530 BC, is in the National Museum in
Athens, Greece.
Architecture
Aware of Egyptian temples in stone, the Greeks began to build their own stone temples
in a distinctive style in the 7th century.
They used limestone in Italy and Sicily, marble in the Greek islands and Asia Minor,
and limestone covered with marble on the Greek mainland. (e.g. Temple of Hera,
Paestum)
Vase Painting
Vases are crowded with figures set against backgrounds of floral ornament.
Northampton Vase
The decoration on the Northampton Vase is an example of the black-figure style
of vase painting popular in Greece in the early 7th and late 6th centuries BC. The
mythological creatures and delicate floral designs reflect Greek interest in
imagery that is also typical of Oriental art, and these forms are augmented with
white and brown highlights.
Classical Period
Greek art of the Classical period, from the era of the Persian Wars through the reign of
Alexander the Great, was fully developed, independent of foreign influences, and much
sought after in other lands.
o Its relatively slim columns indicate a reaction against the heavy proportions of
the Archaic Doric style.
Sculpture
Expresses a solemnity, or a new seriousness, along with a new strength and simplicity
of form. (e.g. Charioteer, Poseidon or Zeus)
Charioteer
This bronze statue of a charioteer (c. 470 BC), originally formed part of a group
that included a chariot and horses. The figure represents a kings charioteer. It is
an example of the early Classical Greek style, and as such is more lifelike than
Archaic Greek sculpture.The eyes are made of glass paste with lashes made of
hairlike pieces of bronze.
Poseidon or Zeus
This statue, retrieved from Cape Artemision and preserved in the National
Archaeological Museum of Athens, is probably a representation of Poseidon. The
bronze statue (480-470 BC), whose head is shown here, represents a god in the
act of hurling an object, unfortunately now lost. If, as some believe, the object
was a thunderbolt rather than Poseidon's trident, the work could have been an
image of Zeus.
Painting
Almost no mural painting dating from the Early Classical period has survived. It
includes the work of Polygnotus, the greatest painter of his time.
His murals in the Lesche, or assembly hall, of the Cnidians in Delphi, which depicted
the fall of Troy and the world of the dead, were described by Pausanias; Pliny the Elder
wrote that Polygnotus was the first master of expression.
Architecture
Architects developed a number of refinements to counteract the apparent distortions of
perspective. (e.g. Erechteum)
Sculpture
The greatest sculptors of the Middle Classical period were Phidias and Polyclitus.
Ancient Greek opinion held that, Phidias was the sculptor of gods, and Polyclitus the
sculptor of mortals. Phidias created two colossal chryselephantine statues, that of Zeus,
at Olympia (see Statue of Zeus), and that of Athena, in the Parthenon.
(e.g. Statue of Zeus, Discuss Thrower)
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Statue of Zeus
The statue of Zeus that Phidias made for Olympia c. 435 BC was perhaps the
most famous sculpture in ancient Greece. The gods robe and ornaments were
made of gold and the body was carved from ivory. Today, the statue is known
only from the writings of Phidias. contemporaries. This engraving shows an
imaginary reconstruction of the statue, which stood 12 m (40 ft high).
Discus Thrower
The Discus Thrower, a life-size statue by Myron of Eleutherae, was made in about
450 BC, the classical period of Greek art. The sculpture, originally in bronze,
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Painting
Figures in the vase painting of the Middle Classical period are drawn in a rudimentary
linear perspective
o that gives them a three-dimensional appearance.
Such vase paintings probably resemble the lost works of the famous painters
Apollodorus and Zeuxis.
o The latter is reported to have painted a bunch of grapes so realistically that
birds tried to peck at them.
Late Classical Period
Architecture
Temples still were built in the Doric style, but the porch at the rear was omitted.
o An example is the Temple of Aesculapius in Epidaurus (c. 380 B.C.)
Theatre at Epidaurus
This theatre in Epidaurus, Greece, was designed by Polyclitus the Younger in
350 BC. A late classical structure, it featured stone benches instead of the
wood benches found in earlier theatre constructions
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Sculpture
Late Classical sculpture was dominated by Lysippus, Praxiteles, and Scopas. Lysippus
created lithe young athletes,
Perhaps the most outstanding of the three was Praxiteles, who worked in a soft,
graceful style.
o In his Hermes with the Infant Dionysus (c. 330-320 bc, Archaeological
Museum, Olympia), the tree trunk that supports Hermes is drawn into the
composition by the voluptuous curves of the figure.
HELLENISTIC PERIOD
Architecture
The Doric style continued to be used for small temples and for the lower storey of the
new, two-storey buildings.
(e.g. Temple of Apollo)
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Sculpture
Sculpture was created that had open formsthat is, forms that tended to carry the
viewer's eye beyond the space occupied by the figuresand an emotionally charged
style.
(e.g. Venus de Milo, Nike of Samothrace)
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Venus de Milo
The Venus de Milo (c. 150-100 BC), the best-known piece of Classical statuary,
was discovered at Melos in 1820. The marble figure, approximately 2.05 m (6 ft
10 in) high, personifies Aphrodite, Greek goddess of love and beauty, whose
counterpart in Roman mythology was Venus.
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Nike of Samothrace
The Nike of Samothrace (the Winged Victory), dating from c.190 BC, is one of the
most famous Greek sculptures from the Hellenistic period. The marble statue,
which stands about 2.4 m (8 ft) high, was originally part of a much larger
monument that featured a large sculpture of a warship with the goddess of
victory on the prow. The monument also included a two-tiered fountain. Formerly
located on the island of Samothrki (Samothrace), the sculpture is now part of
the collection of the Muse du Louvre, Paris.
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