Hellenistic art

Laocoön Group, Vatican Museums, Rome

The art of the Hellenistic time (from 400 B.C. to the end of the first century B.C.) in Greece) is sculpture and painting and other things. For a long time, people said that the art of that time was not good. Pliny the Elder talked about the Greek sculpture of the classical time (500 B.C. - 323 B.C., the time before the Hellenistic time) and then said Cessavit deinde ars ("then art stopped"). But much good art is from the Hellenistic time. Many people know about the sculptures Laocoön (in the picture) and Venus de Milo and Winged Victory of Samothrace.

Now more people have looked at writing about the Hellenistic time. People discovered art from the Hellenistic time at Vergina and other places. Now people can see that the art of the Hellenistic time is very good art.

Architecture

Pergamon Altar, Pergamon Museum, Berlin

One of the things that made the Hellenistic time different from other times was the division of Alexander the Great's country into smaller parts. In every part there was a family of leaders. The Ptolemies had Egypt; the Seleucids had Mesopotamia, the Attalids had Pergamon, and other leaders had other parts. Every family of leaders gave money for art in a way that was different from the way the city-states did it. They made big cities and complex groups of buildings in a way that most city-states had already stopped doing by 500 BC. This way of making buildings was new for Greece. This way was not to try to change or fix a natural place, but to make the buildings fit the natural place. There were many places for pleasure, for example many theatres and places to walk. The Hellenistic countries were lucky because they had much empty space where they could make big new cities. Some of their new cities were Antioch, Pergamon, and Seleucia on the Tigris.

Pergamon is a very good example of Hellenistic architecture. It started with a simple fortress on the Acropolis (a very big rock). Different Attalid kings added to it and made a huge group of buildings. The buildings stretch out from the Acropolis in many directions, using the natural way of that part of the earth. The agora, on the south on the lowest level, has galleries along its sides, with stoai (beautiful tall stone things to hold up the roof.) The agora is the beginning of a street which goes through the whole Acropolis. On the east and top of the rock are the buildings of the organizers, leaders and soldiers. On the west side, at a middle level, are religious buildings. One of the biggest ones is the one with the Pergamon Altar which is called "of the gods and of the giants" and is one of the most beautiful pieces of Greek sculpture. A very big theatre has benches stretched out over the sides of the hill, for people to sit on, and is able to hold almost 10,000 people.

At that time they liked to make very big things. The second temple of Apollo at Didyma was like that. It was twenty kilometers from Miletus in Ionia. Daphnis of Miletus made the design for it at the end of the fourth century B.C. (about 300B.C.) but it was never finished. They continued building it until the 2nd century A.D. (past 100 A.D.). The sanctuary (special part of the temple) is one of the largest ever made near the Mediterranean. Inside a very big room, the cella has two rows of columns (tall round things) around it. The columns are the Ionic kind, almost 20 metres tall, with much complex stone art on the bases and tops.

Sculpture

Barberini Faun, marble copy of a bronze original, around 200 BC, The Glyptothek, Munich

Hellenistic sculpture includes portraits which show things such as suffering, sleep or old age.

Attalus I (269-197 BC), to commemorate his victory at Caicus against the Gauls — called Galatians by the Greeks — had two series of votive groups sculpted: the first, consecrated on the Acropolis of Pergamon, includes the famous Gaul killing himself and his wife, of which the original is lost (the best copy is in the Massimo alle Terme museum of Rome, see illustration); the second group, offered to Athens, is composed of small bronzes of Greeks, Amazons, gods and giants, Persians and Gauls. Artemis Rospigliosi of the Louvre is probably a copy of one of them; as for copies of the Dying Gaul, they were very numerous in the Roman period. The expression of sentiments, the forcefulness of details — bushy hair and moustaches here — and the violence of the movements are characteristic of the Pergamene style.

These characteristics are pushed to their peak in the friezes of the Great Altar of Pergamon, decorated under the order of Eumenes II (197-159 BC) with a gigantomachy stretching 110 metres in length, illustrating in the stone a poem composed especially for the court. The Olympians triumph in it, each on his side, over Giants most of which are transformed into savage beasts: serpents, birds of prey, lions or bulls. Their mother Gaia, come to their aid, can do nothing and must watch them twist in pain under the blows of the gods.

Another phenomenon appears in Hellenistic sculpture: privatization, which involves the recapture of older public patterns in decorative sculpture. This type of retrospective style also exists in ceramics. As for the portraits, they are tinged with naturalism, under the influence of Roman art.

Paintings and mosaics

The Alexander Mosaic, from the House of the Faun, Pompeii, now at the National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Few Greek wall paintings have survived the centuries. However, we can study the Hellenistic influences in Roman frescoes, for example those of Pompeii or Herculaneum. Certain mosaics provide a pretty good idea of the "grand painting" of the period: these are copies of frescoes. An example is the Alexander Mosaic, showing the confrontation of the young conqueror and the Grand King Darius III at the Battle of Issus, a mosaic which adorns the walls of the House of the Faun at Pompeii. It is believed to be a copy of a work described by Pliny the Elder (XXXV, 110) which had been painted by Philoxenus of Eretria for King Cassander of Macedon at the end of the 4th century BC. The mosaic allows us to admire the choice of colours, the composition of the ensemble with turning movement and facial expressivity.

Archeological discoveries at the cemetery of Pagasae (close to modern Volos), at the edge of the Pagasetic Gulf, or again at Vergina (1987), in the former kingdom of Macedonia, have brought to light some original works. For example, the tomb said to be that of Philip II has provided a great frieze representing a royal lion hunt, remarkable by its composition, the arrangement of the figures in space and its realistic representation of nature.

The Hellenistic period is equally the time of development of the mosaic, particularly with the works of Sosos of Pergamon, active in the 2nd century BC and the only mosaic artist cited by Pliny (XXXVI, 184). His taste for trompe l'oeil (optical illusion) and the effects of the medium are found in several works attributed to him such as the "Unswept Floor" in the Vatican museum, representing the leftovers of a repast (fish bones, bones, empty shells, etc.) and the "Dove Basin" at the Capitoline Museum, known by means of a reproduction discovered in Hadrian's Villa. In it one sees four doves perched on the edge of a basin filled with water. One of them is watering herself while the others seem to be resting, which creates effects of reflections and shadow perfectly studied by the artist.

Ceramics

Lagynos decorated with musical instruments, 150100 BC, the Louvre

The Hellenistic period is that of the decline of painting on vases. The most common vases are black and uniform, with a shiny appearance approaching that of varnish, decorated with simple motifs of flowers or festoons. It is also the period when vases in relief appeared, doubtless in imitation of vases made of precious metals: wreaths in relief were applied to the body of the vase, or again the one shown here received veins or gadroons. One finds also more complex relief, based on animals or legendary creatures. The shapes of the vases are also inspired by the tradition of metal: thus with the lagynos (pictured here), a wine jar typical of the period.

In parallel there subsisted a tradition of polychromatic figurative painting: the artists sought a greater variety of tints than in the past. However, these newer colours are more delicate and do not support heat. The painting occurred therefore after firing, contrary to the traditional practice. The fragility of the pigments preventing frequent use of these vases, they were reserved for use in funerals. The most representative copies of this style come from Centuripe in Sicily, where a workshop was active until the 3rd century B.C. These vases are characterized by a base painted pink. The figures, often female, are represented in coloured clothing: blue-violet chiton, yellow himation, white veil. The style is reminiscent of Pompei and is situated much more on the side of the grand contemporary paintings than on the heritage of the red-figure pottery.

Minor arts

Metallic art

Elements of a funeral crown, 3rd century CE, Louvre

Progress in bronze casting made it possible for the Greeks to create large works, such as the Colossus of Rhodes, with a height of 32 meters. Many of the large bronze statues were lost - with the majority being melted to recover the material. Because of this, only the smaller objects still exist. Fortunately, during Hellenistic Greece, the raw materials were plentiful following eastern conquests.

The work on metal vases took on a new fullness: the artists competed among themselves with great virtuosity. At Panagyurishte (now in Bulgaria), skilfully sculpted gold vases have been found: on an amphora, two rearing centaurs form the handles. In Derveni, not far from Salonica, a tomb has provided a great krater with bronze volutes dating from approximately 320 BC and weighing 40 kilograms (Derveni krater). It is decorated with a 32-centimetre-tall frieze of figures in relief representing Dionysus surrounded by Ariadne and her procession of satyrs and maenads. The neck is decorated with ornamental motifs while four satyrs in high relief are casually seated on the shoulders of the vase. The evolution is similar for the art of jewellery. The jewellers of the time excelled at handling details and filigrees: thus, the funeral wreaths present very realistic leaves of trees or stalks of wheat. In this period the insetting of precious stones flourished.

The figurines were equally fashionable. They represented divinities as well as subjects from contemporary life. Thus emerged the theme of the "negro", particularly in Ptolemaic Egypt: these statuettes of Black adolescents were successful up to the Roman period. Sometimes, they were reduced to echoing a form from the great sculptures: thus one finds numerous copies in miniature of the Tyche (good luck) of Antioch, of which the original dates to the beginning of the 3rd century BC.

Terra cotta figurines

Obese woman holding a jar of wine, Kertch, second half of 4th century BCE, Louvre

Previously reserved for religious use, in Hellenistic Greece the Greek terracotta figurine was more frequently used for funerary, and even decorative, purposes. The refinement of molding techniques made it possible to create true miniature statues, with a high level of detail.

In Tanagra, in Boeotia, the figurines, full of lively colours, most often represent elegant women in scenes full of charm. At Smyrna, in Asia Minor, two major styles occurred side-by-side: first of all, copies of masterpieces of great sculpture, such as Farnese Hercules in gilt terra cotta. In a completely different genre, there are the "grotesques", which contrast violently with the canons of "Greek beauty": the koroplathos (figurine maker) fashions deformed bodies in tortuous poses — hunchbacks, epileptics, hydrocephalics, obese women, etc. One could therefore wonder whether these were medical models, the town of Smyrna being reputed for its medical school. Or they could simply be caricatures, designed to provoke laughter. The "grotesques" are equally common at Tarsus and also at Alexandria.

Art of glass and glyptic

It was in the Hellenistic period that the Greeks, who until then only knew molded glass, discovered the technique of glass blowing, thus permitting new forms. The art of glass developed especially in Italy. Molded glass continued, notably in the creation of intaglio jewelry.

The art of engraving on gems hardly advanced at all, limiting itself to mass-produced items that lacked originality. As compensation, the cameo made its appearance. It concerns cutting in relief on a stone composed of several colored layers, allowing the object to be presented in relief through the effects of color. After that it is mounted on a pendant or as a ring. The Hellenistic period produced some masterpieces like the Gonzaga cameo Archived 2009-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, now preserved at the Hermitage Museum.

Bibliography

  • Boardman, John (1989). Greek Art. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-20292-3.
  • Burn, Lucilla (2005). Hellenistic Art: From Alexander The Great To Augustus. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Trust Publications. ISBN 0-89236-776-8.
  • Charbonneaux, Jean, Jean Martin and Roland Villard (1973). Hellenistic Greece. Translated by Peter Green. New York: Braziller. ISBN 0-8076-0666-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Havelock, Christine Mitchell (1968). Hellenistic Art. Greenwich, Connecticut: New York Graphic Society Ltd. ISBN 0393-95133-2.
  • Holtzmann, Bernard and Alain Pasquier (2002). Histoire de l'art antique: l'art grec. Réunion des musées nationaux. ISBN 2-7118-3782-3.
  • Pollitt, Jerome J. (1986). Art in the Hellenistic Age. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-27672-1.

Other websites

Read other articles:

Land preserve in the Coastal Ranges of California Berryessa Snow Mountain National MonumentBerryessa Snow Mountain National MonumentLocationNorthern Inner Coast Ranges, California, U.S.Nearest cityClearlake, CaliforniaCoordinates39°13′0″N 122°46′0″W / 39.21667°N 122.76667°W / 39.21667; -122.76667Area330,780 acres (133,860 ha)EstablishedJuly 10, 2015Governing bodyU.S. Forest Service,U.S. Bureau of Land ManagementWebsiteBerryessa Snow Mountain ...

 

Family of spiders Euctenizidae Aptostichus sp. Scientific classification Domain: Eukaryota Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Chelicerata Class: Arachnida Order: Araneae Infraorder: Mygalomorphae Clade: Avicularioidea Family: EuctenizidaeRaven, 1985 Diversity 8 genera, 77 species The Euctenizidae (formerly Cyrtaucheniidae subfamily Euctenizinae) are a family of mygalomorph spiders. They are now considered to be more closely related to Idiopidae.[citation needed] Etymology...

 

1807 Battle during the War of the Fourth Coalition Battle of Guttstadt-DeppenPart of the War of the Fourth CoalitionThe Stork Tower (Baszta Bociania) in Dobre MiastoDate5–6 June 1807LocationGuttstadt, East Prussia (modern Dobre Miasto, Poland)53°59′N 20°24′E / 53.983°N 20.400°E / 53.983; 20.400Result See aftermathBelligerents French Empire Russian Empire Kingdom of PrussiaCommanders and leaders Michel Ney Nicolas Soult J.-B. Bernadotte (WIA) Claude-Victo...

East Slavic ethnic group This article is about an ethnicity in the Eastern Europe. For surname connected to it, see Polishchuk (surname). You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (February 2019) Click [show] for important translation instructions. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accura...

 

English rock band This article is about the band. For the magazine, see Rolling Stone. For other uses, see Rolling Stone (disambiguation). The Rolling StonesThe Rolling Stones performing at Summerfest in Milwaukee in 2015. From left to right: Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.Background informationOriginLondon, EnglandGenres Rock pop blues Discography Albums and singles songs Years active1962–presentLabels Decca London Rolling Stones Virgin ABKCO Interscope Polydor ...

 

Disambiguazione – Se stai cercando altri significati, vedi Il trovatore (disambigua). Il trovatoreLocandina per Il trovatore (Ohio, 1937)Lingua originaleitaliano MusicaGiuseppe Verdi(partitura online) LibrettoSalvadore Cammarano, Leone Emanuele Bardare(libretto online) Fonti letterarieAntonio García Gutiérrez, El Trovador Attiquattro (indicati come parti) Prima rappr.19 gennaio 1853 TeatroTeatro Apollo, Roma Personaggi Il conte di Luna, giovane gentiluomo aragonese (baritono) Leonora, da...

Discrete probability distribution CategoricalParameters k > 0 {\displaystyle k>0} number of categories (integer) p 1 , … , p k {\displaystyle p_{1},\ldots ,p_{k}} event probabilities ( p i ≥ 0 , Σ p i = 1 ) {\displaystyle (p_{i}\geq 0,\,\Sigma p_{i}=1)} Support x ∈ { 1 , … , k } {\displaystyle x\in \{1,\dots ,k\}} PMF (1) p ( x = i ) = p i {\displaystyle p(x=i)=p_{i}} (2) p ( x ) = p 1 [ x = 1 ] ⋯ p k [ x = k ] {\displaystyle p(x)=p_{1}^{[x=1]}\...

 

American professional wrestler (born 1993) Solo SikoaSikoa in 2024Birth nameJoseph Yokozuna FatuBorn (1993-03-18) March 18, 1993 (age 31)Sacramento, California, U.S.Alma materDickinson State UniversitySpouse(s) Almia Williams ​(m. 2023)​Children2Parent(s)Rikishi (father)FamilyAnoaʻiProfessional wrestling careerRing name(s)Sefa Fatu[1]Solo SikoaBilled height6 ft 2 in (188 cm)[1]Billed weight249 lb (113 kg)[1]Bi...

 

Nissan 180SXInformasiProdusenNissanMasa produksi1989–1998Bodi & rangkaKelasSports carBentuk kerangkaFR coupePlatformS13Mobil terkaitNissan Silvia S13Nissan 240SXSileightyPenyalur dayaMesin1.8 L CA18DET I4 Turbo2.0 L SR20DE I42.0 L SR20DET I4 TurboTransmisi5-speed manual4-speed automaticDimensiJarak sumbu roda2.474 mm (97 in)Panjang4.521 mm (178 in)Lebar1.689 mm (66 in)Tinggi1.290 mm (51 in)Berat kosong1220 kg (2700...

Gustav von SeyffertitzSeyffertitz pada 1922LahirGustav Carl Viktor Bodo Maria von Seyffertitz(1862-08-04)4 Agustus 1862Haimhausen, Kerajaan Bayern, Kekaisaran JermanMeninggal25 Desember 1943(1943-12-25) (umur 81)Los Angeles, California, Amerika SerikatPekerjaanPemeranTahun aktifSekitar 1880–1939Suami/istriKatharina Hoffmann (1886)Toni Creutzburg (1894)FriedaEugenie von MinkNelly Thorne[1]AnakWilhelm (1882)Joan Goodridge Gustav von Seyffertitz (4 Agustus 1862 –&...

 

Indian actor Anupam KherAnupam Kher in 2013Born (1955-03-07) 7 March 1955 (age 69)Simla, PEPSU, IndiaAlma materPanjab University (BA)National School of DramaOccupationsActorproducerOfficeChairman of the Film and Television Institute of IndiaTerm11 October 2017 – 31 October 2018PredecessorGajendra ChauhanSuccessorB. P. SinghSpouses Madhumalti Kapoor ​ ​(m. 1978, separated)​ Kirron Kher ​(m. 1985)​ ChildrenSikan...

 

Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento calcio è priva o carente di note e riferimenti bibliografici puntuali. Commento: La sezione storia ne è quasi sprovvista. Sebbene vi siano una bibliografia e/o dei collegamenti esterni, manca la contestualizzazione delle fonti con note a piè di pagina o altri riferimenti precisi che indichino puntualmente la provenienza delle informazioni. Puoi migliorare questa voce citando le fonti più precisamente. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferime...

Slovak footballer Róbert Jež Personal informationFull name Róbert JežDate of birth (1981-07-10) 10 July 1981 (age 43)Place of birth Nitra, CzechoslovakiaHeight 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)Position(s) MidfielderTeam informationCurrent team Podkonice (head coach)Pohronie (general manager)Youth career NitraSenior career*Years Team Apps (Gls)1999–2000 Nitra 28 (5)2000–2005 Viktoria Plzeň 84 (9)2004 → Příbram (loan) 5 (0)2005–2010 Žilina 172 (35)2011 Górnik Zabrze 14 (5...

 

1951 novel Maigret, Lognon and the Gangsters 1952 editionAuthorGeorges SimenonLanguageFrenchGenreDetectivePublisherPresses de la CitéPublication date1951Publication placeFranceMedia typePrintPages190 Maigret, Lognon and the Gangsters (French: Maigret, Lognon et les gangsters) is a 1951 detective novel by the Belgian writer Georges Simenon, featuring the Paris police officer Jules Maigret.[1] Simenon wrote it while living in Lakeville, Connecticut where he had moved after leaving...

 

Si ce bandeau n'est plus pertinent, retirez-le. Cliquez ici pour en savoir plus. La mise en forme de cet article est à améliorer (avril 2021). La mise en forme du texte ne suit pas les recommandations de Wikipédia : il faut le « wikifier ». Cet article est une ébauche concernant le chemin de fer et la Guinée. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Gares ferroviaires en GuinéePrése...

C言語 C言語のロゴパラダイム 命令型プログラミング、構造化プログラミング、手続き型プログラミング 登場時期 1972年 (52年前) (1972).開発者 ベル研究所、デニス・リッチー、米国国家規格協会、国際標準化機構、ケン・トンプソン 最新リリース ISO/IEC 9899:2018/ 2018年 (6年前) (2018)型付け 弱い静的型付け主な処理系 GCC, Clang, Visual C++, Intel C++ Compiler影響�...

 

Marino LejarretaMarino Lejarreta en 1987.InformationsNom de naissance Marino Lejarreta ArrizabalagaPseudonyme Berrizko ihiaNaissance 14 mai 1957 (67 ans)BerrizNationalité espagnoleDistinction Crieur public de l'Aste Nagusia (d) (1992)Équipes professionnelles 1979Novostil-Helios1980-1982Teka1983-1984Alfa Lum-Olmo1985Alpilatte-Olmo-Cierre1986Seat-Orbea01.1987-04.1987Seat-Orbea-Danena04.1987-1988Caja Rural-Orbea01.1989-06.1989Caja Rural07.1989-12.1989Paternina1990-1992O.N.C.E.Principales ...

 

2000 studio album by Stacey EarleDancin' With Them That Brung MeStudio album by Stacey EarleReleasedMay 9, 2000GenreCountryLength43:36LabelGearle RecordsProducerStacey Earle & Mark StuartStacey Earle chronology Simple Gearle(1998) Dancin' With Them That Brung Me(2000) Must Be Live (with Mark Stuart)(2001) Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic [1] Dancin' With Them That Brung Me is the second solo album by Stacey Earle, following her 1998 release Simple Gear...

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Fly Rasta – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message) 2014 studio album by Ziggy MarleyFly RastaStudio album by Ziggy MarleyReleased15 April 2014 (2014-04-15)RecordedSeptember–...

 

1st–6th century political entities Tun Sun/Tian-Sun/Tu-Kun/Lang-ya-hsiu(頓遜/典遜/都昆/狼牙脩)(เทียนสน/หลังยะสิ่ว)52 CE[1]–c. 6th century CETerritory of Tun Sun (1st-6th centuries CE) and the neighbors. Dark Green: Territory before gaining independence from Funan, proposed by Lawrence Palmer Briggs in 1950;[2]: 260 Light Green: As Lang-chia, territory expanded after gaining independence, proposed by George Cœdès ...