Ancient Greece
Also known as Terracotta Krater
Found in the Diplyon cemetery
Made to mark a gravesite; like a gravestone
The bottom of the vase is open → pour liquid and the liquid goes to the dead OR to drain off rainwater
Completely covered in decorations
Divided into bands/registers → Pictorial bands (friezes)
Humans and animals
Reminder it’s a funerary
Geometric motifs
Top register
The dead figure being mourned, female figures raising their arms (gesture of grief) (decorative lines on faces, tears?)
Checkerboard pattern → funerary shroud
Bottom register
Procession
Chariots and horsemen
Soldiers with shields, spears, and swords.
No pictorial depth
Decorated with slip → clay suspended in liquid then painted on the vase
Didn’t use kilns yet that were hot enough to make it glossy
Generally big and good quality → wealthy and powerful family
Funerary sculpture
Life-sized
Only wearing a choker and headband
Meant to trespass lifetimes
No stone backing
Made of stone
Made to mark a tomb
For aristocratic families
Strongly inspired by Egyptians
Close-form sculpture
Embodied the ideal of the period
Symmetry and pattern
The ideal form of kouros changed over the years → became more naturalistic, lifelike, and muscular
Not about skill but what people wanted
Achilles on the left and Ajax on the right (signed names on top of drawings)
The metaphor of how the myth will unfold
Achilles | Ajax |
Tessara (four) | Tri (three) |
Helmet | No helmet; more hunched over |
Holds spears loosely | Holds spears tensely |
Single line eyebrow | Double line eyebrow - tension |
Feet are relaxed (heel on the ground) | Feet aren’t relaxed (heel not on the ground) - tense body/muscles |
Original in Bronze
Roman marble copy → Romans loved Greek art
Philosophical and mathematical
Moving toward naturalistic
Transitional moment of walking → contrapposto
Tree trunk → structural support
A bridge between the right wrist and right hip
Originally holding a spear
One nude, one clothed.
Cos took the clothed one → more “proper”
Knidos took the nude one → became more popular
Build a special sanctuary for her
Modest Venus → loosely covering herself
Men fall in love with her, not realizing she’s not real.
Female nudity uncommon in Greek art
Would have been painted
On top of a rocky outcropping in the City of Athens
Dedicated to Athena
Poseidon (god of the sea) vs Athena (goddess of wisdom and war)
Poseidon gave salt water of the sea (a gift of naval superiority)
Athena gave an olive tree (idea of the land of prosperity and peace)
Chose Athena
Doric temple with ionic elements
Doric
Massive columns with shallow, broad flutes
A little flare that rises to a simple rectangular block called an abacus
Ionic
Covered with sculpture in the metopes
Metopes were carved with scenes that showed the Greeks battling various enemies, either directly or metaphorically.
Greeks battling the Amazons, Greeks against the Trojans, Lapiths against the centaurs, and Greek gods against the Titans.
Did not depict effortless victory
Forces of civilization challenged and sometimes overcome
Frieze ran around all four sides of the building, just inside this outer row of columns that we see.
Procession for Athena
Pediments → Story of Athena vs Poseidon
The sculpture of Athena missing
Made of gold and ivory
Could have been melted down for money
Brightly colored
No altar outside. Maybe served as a treasury.
No right angles. Slight adjustments and curves to make it look straight.
Columns are bulging
Ottomans used the Parthenon to hold ammunition and gunpowder
Gunpowder exploded from the inside
Lord Elgin took shit and brought them back to England
Originally would have been in the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on the Island of Samothrace
Military victory monument
Hellenistic → more expressive
Would have been facing the coast, so the wind would have added to the illusion of the clothing.
Maybe stood within a fountain
Maybe blowing a trumpet or offering a crown of victory
Originally would have been painted brightly
Right-wing modern replica → would have been higher than the left-wing
Maybe have been gesturing a greeting
In-flight
Goddess of victory
Crowns gods and victorious athletes
Rarely featured in Greek mythology
Laocoon → Trojan priest
Knew the Trojan Horse was a trap
A goddess (protector of Greeks) didn’t like that
Sent serpents to eat him and his sons
Reconstructed; limbs could be placed differently
Very expressive
One side has Athena; the other has Zeus
The battle between the giants and the gods and goddesses
Athena’s side
Battling a Titan
Athena’s winning
Grabbed Alcyoneous by the hair, pulling him out of the earth while one of Athena’s snakes is biting him
His mother is unable to help him
Athena’s head is missing
Being crowned by Nike
Zeus’ side
Zeus’ winning
Defeating three giants
Eagles and thunderbolts
Optimism that they could overcome chaos
Fire would have been lit along the stairs → grand staircase
Figures spill out away from the wall
Mediterranean
Easiest way to move people and goods
Roads were limited to dirt tracks
Greeks established colonies and trading stations around the Mediterranean and profited from trade with them
Greeks built boats for warfare and used the water to aid their causes
Ancient Aegean
First major civilization in Europe
Home to three distinct but related cultures: Minoans, Mycenaeans, and Cycladics
Characterized by trade and communication opportunities with the Near east and the Mediterranean
Cycladic, Minoan, Mycenaean
Cyclades
“Kyklos” → “circle”
Named for their rough circular formation around the sacred island of Delos
Group of islands in the Aegean Sea
Rich in mineral resources, including marble, copper, lead, iron, gold, and silver.
Likely cultivated barley and wheat and fished the Aegean
The reason for abandonment is unknown
Art
Known for their white marble sculptures which depict abstracted nude human figures
Female nudes, roughly triangular bodies, inverted triangular heads, and crossed arms.
Meant to lie down
Symbolize mother goddess, fertility, rebirth, or the afterlife.
Minoan
Named after the mythical King Minos
Believes to have rules Knossos in the distant past
Known for its sophisticated culture
Included elaborate pottery, seals, and frescoes.
Art
Often depicted religious and secular scenes and featured motifs like the snake, bull, and leaping dancer.
Seafaring and trading people who traded with Egypt, Cyprus, and the Near East.
Mycenaean
City of Mycenae
A fortified palace in the Peloponnese that was a prominent center of Mycenaean culture
Warlike, prosperous, and powerful people who traded with other cultures in the Mediterranean and beyond.
Acquired materials like ivory and gold through trade, and produced goods like ceramics and bronze objects to trade.
Created a sophisticated culture that included art, writing, and urban organization.
Metalwork, architecture, and terracotta figures.
Buon fresco
Applying pigment to wet lime plaster without a binding agent
Plaster absorbs the pigment and fixes it, protecting it from fading.
Bull-Leaping Fresco
Durable because the pigment is part of the wall
It must be done quickly without mistakes
Homer
Author of the Iliad and the Odyssey
One of the greatest literary artists in the world
Iliad
Epic poem about the Trojan War
Minotaur
Half-man, half-bull monster that was kept in a labyrinth on the island of Crete
Child of Pasiphae, the wife of King Minos, and a snow-white bull sent to Minos by Poseidon
Minos demanded the Athens send seven young men and seven young women into the Labyrinth every nine years to be eaten by the Minotaur
Theseus
Killed the Minotaur with the help of Ariadne, the daughter of Minos and Pasiphae
Escaped the Labyrinth with a ball of thread given to him by Ariadne
Troy
Setting for the Trojan War in Homer’s Iliads and Odyssey
Trojan War
Legendary conflict in Greek mythology between the Greeks and the city of Troy
One of the most important events in Greek history
Begun when Paris, the prince of Troy, abducted Helen, the queen of Sparta, and took her back to Troy.
Ended when the Greeks pretended to withdraw, leaving a large wooden horse outside the gates of Troy.
Greek Polis
City-state consisting of an urban center and the surrounding countryside
Surrounded by walls for protection
Public spaces
Temples and government buildings
Self-sufficient territory with its own laws, traditions, and organization.
Psyche
“Psyche” → “Soul”
Could also mean butterfly and butterfly represents the soul
In Greek mythology, Psyche was a mortal woman who became the goddess of the soul and the beloved of Eros, the god of love.
Endured many trials set by Aphrodite, the goddess of love and Eros’ mother, who was jealous of Psyche’s beauty.
Zeus granted Psyche immortality and sanctioner her marriage to Eros
Krater
A large, open-mouthed vessel used in ancient Greece to mix wine and water at symposiums.
Made of metal or pottery
Often painted or decorated
Usually placed in the center of the room at a symposium
Sometimes used as grave markers
Found in burial sites as containers of ashes
“Krater” → “to mix”
Slip
Liquid clay mixture
A mix of clay and water
Similar in consistency to thick cream
The ratio of water to clay was not fixed
Consistency could be adjusted depending on the intended use
It could be used for a variety of purposes
Adhesive: attach appendages to the body of a vessel
Decoration: decorate the surface of a vessel
Pottery: glazing, painting, and dipping
Black-figure: painted in black slip on a red clay background
Red-figure: outlined with black slip on a red clay background
White-ground: light slip applied to the background to make vases appear more valuable
Often used as votives and grave vessels
Relief lines: form raised lines that outline forms
Wash: create a wash effect for hair, fur, and anatomy
Kouros/Kore
Male youth, especially of noble rank.
Statue of a nude young man standing with his left foot forward and arms at his sides
Grave monuments and dedications to the gods in sanctuaries
Meant to represent the idea of youth rather than any one individual
Originated under Egyptian influence
Typically made from marble, but could also be made from limestone, wood, bronze, ivory, and terracotta.
Often decorated with applied pigments
Female counterpart: korai/kore
Wear richly painted robes and accessories made of expensive metals
Not nude
Archaic smile
Shallow, enigmatic smiles appear on the faces of Greek statues.
Exact meaning unknown
Symbol of youthful vitality and ideal health and well-being
Mark of aristocratic status
Result of technical difficulty in fitting the curved shape of the moment
Deliberate artistic choice with symbolic reasons
Most likely just a way to show the statue has life
Open Form
Has a dynamic relationship with the space around it
Often closer in shape to the figures they represent, making them more lifelike
Closed Form
More structurally robust and resistant to wear or breakage
The Canon of Proportions
Set of mathematical ratios and measurements used to create an idealized representation of the human body
Based on the idea that the human body should be in harmony, with a balance between its different parts.
Believed that the mathematical ratios of the canon were a manifestation of divine proportions in the universe
Used in both sculpture and architecture to create esthetic perfection and convey an idealized beauty
Pythagoras
Made important developments in mathematics, astronomy, and the theory of music.
Peplos Kore
Greek statue of a young woman
Might depict a goddess like Artemis or Athena
Due to her unique clothing and possible accessories
Example of the transition to more naturalistic forms in monumental sculpture and the evolution of artistic styles of the time
Not completely straight
Face is leaned slightly to the side
Long curls fall over her shoulders
Ribbon fastens them behind her
Symmetria
Harmony of an object’s parts or the good proportions between them
“Syn” → “Together” or “Common”
“Metron” → “Measure”
Used to describe the proportions of buildings and sculptures
Sculptors used mathematical ratios and grids
Meander
Decorative patterns symbolize eternity, infinity, and unity.
Common in pottery and architectural friezes
Band of short horizontal and vertical fillets that connect at right angles
Cella
Inner shrine of an ancient Greek temple where a statue or cult image of the temple’s deity was housed
Center of the temple
Might contain a table for votive offerings
No gatherings or sacrifices
Took place outside the building
Simple rectangular room with an entrance at one end
Pericles
Created the Parthenon
Delian League
Millitary alliance of Greek city-states to fight the Persian Empire and protect ionian Greeks
Athens led the league
Headquarters were on the island of Delos
Members met annually and treasury was kept
Collapsed during the Peloponnesian War when Athens became dominant and demanded payment from members
Athens lost the war
Panathenaic Procession
Grand annual festival procession in ancient Athens that culminated the Panathenaia, a religious festival in honor of Athena
Began in the Kerameioks neighborhood and ended at the Acropolis
High priestess, temple treasurers, priests, priestesses, unmarried young women, magistrates, soldiers, athletes, representatives from other states, musicians, and herdsmen.
New peplos or robe for the cult statue of Athena Polias.
So large that it was carried on a ship’s mast
Large-scale sacrifice of over 100 cows and sheep on the altar of Athena
Doric
First style of stone temple architecture in ancient Greece
Stouter than those of the Ionic or Corinthian orders
Fluted shafts and often placed close together without bases
Simple and pain with a rounded section at the bottom and a square at the top
Frieze composed of triglyphs and metopes
Ionic
Second style of stone temple architecture in ancient Greece
More slender and more ornate than the masculine Doric style
Scroll-shaped ornaments on the capital which sits at the top of the column shaft
Corinthian
Most elaborate of all Greek column architecture
Bell-shaped capitals with two rows of acanthus leaves and scrolls
Thin and fluted
More slender than ionic columns
Column
Fundamental architectural feature that served both practical and artistic purposes
Supported the weight of roofs, allowing the Greeks to build larger temples.
Decorative element and a symbol of power, agelessness, and democracy.
Limestone, tufa, or marble
Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian
Frieze
Decorative band of panel that was located in the middle of an entablature, the section of a building that rests on the top of a column
Display images and scenes related to Greek culture and beliefs
Often carved or painted
Could depict scenes from mythology or daily life
Pediment
Triangular gable that served both structural and decorative purposes
Decorated with sculptures or reliefs depicting mythological scenes
used to add grandness to entrances and provide a center point for symmetric designs
Metopes
Rectangular architectural elements that filled the space between triglyphs in the frieze of a Doric temple
Decorated with painted or sculptural reliefs
Depicted mythical scenes
Allusions to the Greeks’ recent real-life victories over the Persians
Triglyphs
Visual design element in the Doric order of temple architecture that represented the wooden beams used in prehistoric buildings
“Thrice-grooved”
Rectangular block with two vertical grooves, or glyphs, and two chamfers, or half grooves, at the sides.
Thought to be a representation of the wooden beam ends of primitive huts
May have channeled rainwater
Aligned over and between each column
Entasis
Architectural device used in ancient Greece to create a subtle curve in columns, spires, and other upright elements to correct the optical illusion that straight lines appear to taper or curve.
Used to make larger structures appear straight and counteract the illusion that straight lines appear to taper in the middle
Acropolis
Natural strongholds constructed on rocky, elevated ground
Centauromachy
Mythological battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs that symbolized the triumph of civilization over barbarism
Centaurs attacked the Lapiths in an attempt to abduct the Lapith women
Lapiths won the battle with the help of Theseus
Chryselephantine
Type of figural sculpture in which the flesh was made of ivory and the drapery of gold
Wet Drapery
Style that depicts clothing that clings to the body in a way that suggests it’s wet
Used to reveal the body’s shape and details while keeping the figure modest
Contrapposto
A sculptural technique that depicted the human figure in a more natural pose, with most of the weight on one leg.
Shoulders, hips, and head tilt create a natural-looking twist in the torso.
“Contrapposto” → “Counterpose”
A crucial development in the history of Western art
Allowed artists to realistically portray the human body
Persian Wars
Series of conflicts between the Persia and Greece
Significant impact on the survival of Greek culture and the establishment of democracy in Athens
Peloponnesian War
Conflict between Athens and Sparta
Fought to determine which city-state would dominate the Greek world
Sparta won
Alexander the Great
Ancient Macedonian ruler who established on the largest empires in the ancient world
Known for his military genius and diplomatic skills
Macedonia
Small kingdom in northern Greece
Became more powerful under the leadership of King Philip II, who united the southern Greek city-states with the north.
His son, Alexander the Great, expanded the empire to Asia and India
Repatriation
Process of returning the cultural objects, such as art and artifacts, to their country of origin.
Ancient or looted objects or the remains of ancestors
Sculptures were removed from temple walls in Greece in the early 1800s by Lord Elgin and sold to the British government
British Museum currently displays them
Also known as Terracotta Krater
Found in the Diplyon cemetery
Made to mark a gravesite; like a gravestone
The bottom of the vase is open → pour liquid and the liquid goes to the dead OR to drain off rainwater
Completely covered in decorations
Divided into bands/registers → Pictorial bands (friezes)
Humans and animals
Reminder it’s a funerary
Geometric motifs
Top register
The dead figure being mourned, female figures raising their arms (gesture of grief) (decorative lines on faces, tears?)
Checkerboard pattern → funerary shroud
Bottom register
Procession
Chariots and horsemen
Soldiers with shields, spears, and swords.
No pictorial depth
Decorated with slip → clay suspended in liquid then painted on the vase
Didn’t use kilns yet that were hot enough to make it glossy
Generally big and good quality → wealthy and powerful family
Funerary sculpture
Life-sized
Only wearing a choker and headband
Meant to trespass lifetimes
No stone backing
Made of stone
Made to mark a tomb
For aristocratic families
Strongly inspired by Egyptians
Close-form sculpture
Embodied the ideal of the period
Symmetry and pattern
The ideal form of kouros changed over the years → became more naturalistic, lifelike, and muscular
Not about skill but what people wanted
Achilles on the left and Ajax on the right (signed names on top of drawings)
The metaphor of how the myth will unfold
Achilles | Ajax |
Tessara (four) | Tri (three) |
Helmet | No helmet; more hunched over |
Holds spears loosely | Holds spears tensely |
Single line eyebrow | Double line eyebrow - tension |
Feet are relaxed (heel on the ground) | Feet aren’t relaxed (heel not on the ground) - tense body/muscles |
Original in Bronze
Roman marble copy → Romans loved Greek art
Philosophical and mathematical
Moving toward naturalistic
Transitional moment of walking → contrapposto
Tree trunk → structural support
A bridge between the right wrist and right hip
Originally holding a spear
One nude, one clothed.
Cos took the clothed one → more “proper”
Knidos took the nude one → became more popular
Build a special sanctuary for her
Modest Venus → loosely covering herself
Men fall in love with her, not realizing she’s not real.
Female nudity uncommon in Greek art
Would have been painted
On top of a rocky outcropping in the City of Athens
Dedicated to Athena
Poseidon (god of the sea) vs Athena (goddess of wisdom and war)
Poseidon gave salt water of the sea (a gift of naval superiority)
Athena gave an olive tree (idea of the land of prosperity and peace)
Chose Athena
Doric temple with ionic elements
Doric
Massive columns with shallow, broad flutes
A little flare that rises to a simple rectangular block called an abacus
Ionic
Covered with sculpture in the metopes
Metopes were carved with scenes that showed the Greeks battling various enemies, either directly or metaphorically.
Greeks battling the Amazons, Greeks against the Trojans, Lapiths against the centaurs, and Greek gods against the Titans.
Did not depict effortless victory
Forces of civilization challenged and sometimes overcome
Frieze ran around all four sides of the building, just inside this outer row of columns that we see.
Procession for Athena
Pediments → Story of Athena vs Poseidon
The sculpture of Athena missing
Made of gold and ivory
Could have been melted down for money
Brightly colored
No altar outside. Maybe served as a treasury.
No right angles. Slight adjustments and curves to make it look straight.
Columns are bulging
Ottomans used the Parthenon to hold ammunition and gunpowder
Gunpowder exploded from the inside
Lord Elgin took shit and brought them back to England
Originally would have been in the Sanctuary of the Great Gods on the Island of Samothrace
Military victory monument
Hellenistic → more expressive
Would have been facing the coast, so the wind would have added to the illusion of the clothing.
Maybe stood within a fountain
Maybe blowing a trumpet or offering a crown of victory
Originally would have been painted brightly
Right-wing modern replica → would have been higher than the left-wing
Maybe have been gesturing a greeting
In-flight
Goddess of victory
Crowns gods and victorious athletes
Rarely featured in Greek mythology
Laocoon → Trojan priest
Knew the Trojan Horse was a trap
A goddess (protector of Greeks) didn’t like that
Sent serpents to eat him and his sons
Reconstructed; limbs could be placed differently
Very expressive
One side has Athena; the other has Zeus
The battle between the giants and the gods and goddesses
Athena’s side
Battling a Titan
Athena’s winning
Grabbed Alcyoneous by the hair, pulling him out of the earth while one of Athena’s snakes is biting him
His mother is unable to help him
Athena’s head is missing
Being crowned by Nike
Zeus’ side
Zeus’ winning
Defeating three giants
Eagles and thunderbolts
Optimism that they could overcome chaos
Fire would have been lit along the stairs → grand staircase
Figures spill out away from the wall
Mediterranean
Easiest way to move people and goods
Roads were limited to dirt tracks
Greeks established colonies and trading stations around the Mediterranean and profited from trade with them
Greeks built boats for warfare and used the water to aid their causes
Ancient Aegean
First major civilization in Europe
Home to three distinct but related cultures: Minoans, Mycenaeans, and Cycladics
Characterized by trade and communication opportunities with the Near east and the Mediterranean
Cycladic, Minoan, Mycenaean
Cyclades
“Kyklos” → “circle”
Named for their rough circular formation around the sacred island of Delos
Group of islands in the Aegean Sea
Rich in mineral resources, including marble, copper, lead, iron, gold, and silver.
Likely cultivated barley and wheat and fished the Aegean
The reason for abandonment is unknown
Art
Known for their white marble sculptures which depict abstracted nude human figures
Female nudes, roughly triangular bodies, inverted triangular heads, and crossed arms.
Meant to lie down
Symbolize mother goddess, fertility, rebirth, or the afterlife.
Minoan
Named after the mythical King Minos
Believes to have rules Knossos in the distant past
Known for its sophisticated culture
Included elaborate pottery, seals, and frescoes.
Art
Often depicted religious and secular scenes and featured motifs like the snake, bull, and leaping dancer.
Seafaring and trading people who traded with Egypt, Cyprus, and the Near East.
Mycenaean
City of Mycenae
A fortified palace in the Peloponnese that was a prominent center of Mycenaean culture
Warlike, prosperous, and powerful people who traded with other cultures in the Mediterranean and beyond.
Acquired materials like ivory and gold through trade, and produced goods like ceramics and bronze objects to trade.
Created a sophisticated culture that included art, writing, and urban organization.
Metalwork, architecture, and terracotta figures.
Buon fresco
Applying pigment to wet lime plaster without a binding agent
Plaster absorbs the pigment and fixes it, protecting it from fading.
Bull-Leaping Fresco
Durable because the pigment is part of the wall
It must be done quickly without mistakes
Homer
Author of the Iliad and the Odyssey
One of the greatest literary artists in the world
Iliad
Epic poem about the Trojan War
Minotaur
Half-man, half-bull monster that was kept in a labyrinth on the island of Crete
Child of Pasiphae, the wife of King Minos, and a snow-white bull sent to Minos by Poseidon
Minos demanded the Athens send seven young men and seven young women into the Labyrinth every nine years to be eaten by the Minotaur
Theseus
Killed the Minotaur with the help of Ariadne, the daughter of Minos and Pasiphae
Escaped the Labyrinth with a ball of thread given to him by Ariadne
Troy
Setting for the Trojan War in Homer’s Iliads and Odyssey
Trojan War
Legendary conflict in Greek mythology between the Greeks and the city of Troy
One of the most important events in Greek history
Begun when Paris, the prince of Troy, abducted Helen, the queen of Sparta, and took her back to Troy.
Ended when the Greeks pretended to withdraw, leaving a large wooden horse outside the gates of Troy.
Greek Polis
City-state consisting of an urban center and the surrounding countryside
Surrounded by walls for protection
Public spaces
Temples and government buildings
Self-sufficient territory with its own laws, traditions, and organization.
Psyche
“Psyche” → “Soul”
Could also mean butterfly and butterfly represents the soul
In Greek mythology, Psyche was a mortal woman who became the goddess of the soul and the beloved of Eros, the god of love.
Endured many trials set by Aphrodite, the goddess of love and Eros’ mother, who was jealous of Psyche’s beauty.
Zeus granted Psyche immortality and sanctioner her marriage to Eros
Krater
A large, open-mouthed vessel used in ancient Greece to mix wine and water at symposiums.
Made of metal or pottery
Often painted or decorated
Usually placed in the center of the room at a symposium
Sometimes used as grave markers
Found in burial sites as containers of ashes
“Krater” → “to mix”
Slip
Liquid clay mixture
A mix of clay and water
Similar in consistency to thick cream
The ratio of water to clay was not fixed
Consistency could be adjusted depending on the intended use
It could be used for a variety of purposes
Adhesive: attach appendages to the body of a vessel
Decoration: decorate the surface of a vessel
Pottery: glazing, painting, and dipping
Black-figure: painted in black slip on a red clay background
Red-figure: outlined with black slip on a red clay background
White-ground: light slip applied to the background to make vases appear more valuable
Often used as votives and grave vessels
Relief lines: form raised lines that outline forms
Wash: create a wash effect for hair, fur, and anatomy
Kouros/Kore
Male youth, especially of noble rank.
Statue of a nude young man standing with his left foot forward and arms at his sides
Grave monuments and dedications to the gods in sanctuaries
Meant to represent the idea of youth rather than any one individual
Originated under Egyptian influence
Typically made from marble, but could also be made from limestone, wood, bronze, ivory, and terracotta.
Often decorated with applied pigments
Female counterpart: korai/kore
Wear richly painted robes and accessories made of expensive metals
Not nude
Archaic smile
Shallow, enigmatic smiles appear on the faces of Greek statues.
Exact meaning unknown
Symbol of youthful vitality and ideal health and well-being
Mark of aristocratic status
Result of technical difficulty in fitting the curved shape of the moment
Deliberate artistic choice with symbolic reasons
Most likely just a way to show the statue has life
Open Form
Has a dynamic relationship with the space around it
Often closer in shape to the figures they represent, making them more lifelike
Closed Form
More structurally robust and resistant to wear or breakage
The Canon of Proportions
Set of mathematical ratios and measurements used to create an idealized representation of the human body
Based on the idea that the human body should be in harmony, with a balance between its different parts.
Believed that the mathematical ratios of the canon were a manifestation of divine proportions in the universe
Used in both sculpture and architecture to create esthetic perfection and convey an idealized beauty
Pythagoras
Made important developments in mathematics, astronomy, and the theory of music.
Peplos Kore
Greek statue of a young woman
Might depict a goddess like Artemis or Athena
Due to her unique clothing and possible accessories
Example of the transition to more naturalistic forms in monumental sculpture and the evolution of artistic styles of the time
Not completely straight
Face is leaned slightly to the side
Long curls fall over her shoulders
Ribbon fastens them behind her
Symmetria
Harmony of an object’s parts or the good proportions between them
“Syn” → “Together” or “Common”
“Metron” → “Measure”
Used to describe the proportions of buildings and sculptures
Sculptors used mathematical ratios and grids
Meander
Decorative patterns symbolize eternity, infinity, and unity.
Common in pottery and architectural friezes
Band of short horizontal and vertical fillets that connect at right angles
Cella
Inner shrine of an ancient Greek temple where a statue or cult image of the temple’s deity was housed
Center of the temple
Might contain a table for votive offerings
No gatherings or sacrifices
Took place outside the building
Simple rectangular room with an entrance at one end
Pericles
Created the Parthenon
Delian League
Millitary alliance of Greek city-states to fight the Persian Empire and protect ionian Greeks
Athens led the league
Headquarters were on the island of Delos
Members met annually and treasury was kept
Collapsed during the Peloponnesian War when Athens became dominant and demanded payment from members
Athens lost the war
Panathenaic Procession
Grand annual festival procession in ancient Athens that culminated the Panathenaia, a religious festival in honor of Athena
Began in the Kerameioks neighborhood and ended at the Acropolis
High priestess, temple treasurers, priests, priestesses, unmarried young women, magistrates, soldiers, athletes, representatives from other states, musicians, and herdsmen.
New peplos or robe for the cult statue of Athena Polias.
So large that it was carried on a ship’s mast
Large-scale sacrifice of over 100 cows and sheep on the altar of Athena
Doric
First style of stone temple architecture in ancient Greece
Stouter than those of the Ionic or Corinthian orders
Fluted shafts and often placed close together without bases
Simple and pain with a rounded section at the bottom and a square at the top
Frieze composed of triglyphs and metopes
Ionic
Second style of stone temple architecture in ancient Greece
More slender and more ornate than the masculine Doric style
Scroll-shaped ornaments on the capital which sits at the top of the column shaft
Corinthian
Most elaborate of all Greek column architecture
Bell-shaped capitals with two rows of acanthus leaves and scrolls
Thin and fluted
More slender than ionic columns
Column
Fundamental architectural feature that served both practical and artistic purposes
Supported the weight of roofs, allowing the Greeks to build larger temples.
Decorative element and a symbol of power, agelessness, and democracy.
Limestone, tufa, or marble
Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian
Frieze
Decorative band of panel that was located in the middle of an entablature, the section of a building that rests on the top of a column
Display images and scenes related to Greek culture and beliefs
Often carved or painted
Could depict scenes from mythology or daily life
Pediment
Triangular gable that served both structural and decorative purposes
Decorated with sculptures or reliefs depicting mythological scenes
used to add grandness to entrances and provide a center point for symmetric designs
Metopes
Rectangular architectural elements that filled the space between triglyphs in the frieze of a Doric temple
Decorated with painted or sculptural reliefs
Depicted mythical scenes
Allusions to the Greeks’ recent real-life victories over the Persians
Triglyphs
Visual design element in the Doric order of temple architecture that represented the wooden beams used in prehistoric buildings
“Thrice-grooved”
Rectangular block with two vertical grooves, or glyphs, and two chamfers, or half grooves, at the sides.
Thought to be a representation of the wooden beam ends of primitive huts
May have channeled rainwater
Aligned over and between each column
Entasis
Architectural device used in ancient Greece to create a subtle curve in columns, spires, and other upright elements to correct the optical illusion that straight lines appear to taper or curve.
Used to make larger structures appear straight and counteract the illusion that straight lines appear to taper in the middle
Acropolis
Natural strongholds constructed on rocky, elevated ground
Centauromachy
Mythological battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs that symbolized the triumph of civilization over barbarism
Centaurs attacked the Lapiths in an attempt to abduct the Lapith women
Lapiths won the battle with the help of Theseus
Chryselephantine
Type of figural sculpture in which the flesh was made of ivory and the drapery of gold
Wet Drapery
Style that depicts clothing that clings to the body in a way that suggests it’s wet
Used to reveal the body’s shape and details while keeping the figure modest
Contrapposto
A sculptural technique that depicted the human figure in a more natural pose, with most of the weight on one leg.
Shoulders, hips, and head tilt create a natural-looking twist in the torso.
“Contrapposto” → “Counterpose”
A crucial development in the history of Western art
Allowed artists to realistically portray the human body
Persian Wars
Series of conflicts between the Persia and Greece
Significant impact on the survival of Greek culture and the establishment of democracy in Athens
Peloponnesian War
Conflict between Athens and Sparta
Fought to determine which city-state would dominate the Greek world
Sparta won
Alexander the Great
Ancient Macedonian ruler who established on the largest empires in the ancient world
Known for his military genius and diplomatic skills
Macedonia
Small kingdom in northern Greece
Became more powerful under the leadership of King Philip II, who united the southern Greek city-states with the north.
His son, Alexander the Great, expanded the empire to Asia and India
Repatriation
Process of returning the cultural objects, such as art and artifacts, to their country of origin.
Ancient or looted objects or the remains of ancestors
Sculptures were removed from temple walls in Greece in the early 1800s by Lord Elgin and sold to the British government
British Museum currently displays them