1 / 25

Ancient Greece: The Classical Spirit Part II

Ancient Greece: The Classical Spirit Part II. Early Greece. Rise of Ancient Greece Part II. Bronze Age and Mycenaean Civilization end 1100 BCE (Dorian Invasion) New civilization begins in 1000 BCE Geometric period 1000-700 BCE Orientalizing period 700-600 BCE Archaic period 600-480 BCE.

hasad
Download Presentation

Ancient Greece: The Classical Spirit Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ancient Greece: The Classical SpiritPart II Early Greece

  2. Rise of Ancient GreecePart II • Bronze Age and Mycenaean Civilization end 1100 BCE (Dorian Invasion) • New civilization begins in 1000 BCE • Geometric period 1000-700 BCE • Orientalizing period 700-600 BCE • Archaic period 600-480 BCE

  3. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) • Also known as the Heoric Age • No political center = independent city states • Polis ruled by council of aristocrats • Independent

  4. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) • Pottery • Geometric style • decorative geometric bands cover the surface • Shows concern for proportion and thoughtful composition and placement of elements • Commonly narrate funeral procession • Krater large vase with a wide mouth, used as a burial marker

  5. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) • Pottery What are the differences between the Geometric style and the Aegean style?

  6. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) • Sculpture • Not much exists because the material was perishable • Mostly animals • Most likely used as sacrifices to the gods in place of real animals • What exists was found in burial tombs • Simple, abstract and sophisticated

  7. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) Sculpture • Abstract style • Hat and belt • Pinched waste • Exaggeration of important features

  8. Rise of Ancient GreeceGEOMETRIC PERIOD (1000-700BCE) • Known as the Heroic Age because of Iliad and Odyssey • Becomes the “basis for Greek education because of model of conduct—of heroism and pride, of cunning and loyalty” (Benton and Yanni 69). • Iliad = great deeds on the battlefield, military glory, narrow view • Achilles’ tale of purely physical strength • Odyssey = values of home and hearth, patience and wisdom • Odysseus’ tale of wisdom gained through suffering • Conflict to return home as prince or experience adventure and test himself as a hero

  9. Rise of Ancient GreeceORIENTALIZING PERIOD (700-600 BCE) • Polis’ begin trading with the East (Egypt, Persia and Phoenicia) • First see human form sculptures • Unified language with introduction of an alphabet

  10. Rise of Ancient GreeceORIENTALIZING PERIOD (700-600 BCE) • Pottery • Inspired by the oriental • Move away from geometric as form more important (animals, human, etc) • Color reveals origin of vases • Symmetry evident • Human form influenced by Egypt and animal form influenced by Mesopotamia

  11. Rise of Ancient GreeceORIENTALIZING PERIOD (700-600 BCE) • Pottery

  12. Rise of Ancient GreeceORIENTALIZING PERIOD (700-600 BCE) • Sculpture

  13. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Study of human form, naturalism • Pottery • Sculpture • Architecture • Literature

  14. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Pottery • Black Figure Vases • Black glaze over a natural red clay vase • Designs etched in and filled with color • Imperfect silhouettes • Symmetry • Human form vs. animals • Limited by tools

  15. Pottery Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) Narratives told stories of mythology, battles and winners of olympic games

  16. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Pottery • Red Figure Style • Background around subject is glazed in black and figures are painted on with a brush • Details are no longer etched in = more detail and sophistication

  17. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Pottery Composition is detailed and in rectangle to follow the shape of the vase.

  18. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Architecture • Doric style = simple, severe, powerful and not decorative • Appears disproportionate and awkward

  19. Thick heavy columns. Shaft abruptly tapers at the capital = bulge look of the column

  20. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE) • Sculpture • Kouros: life-size representation of nude male youth, standing with one foot forward and arms at sides • Koré: softer or female version. Clothing softened statue • Eastern influences • Stylized, painted and decorated • Later became more naturalistic (true human form) • Proportions become natural (waist)

  21. Rise of Ancient GreeceARCHAIC PERIOD (600-480 BCE)

  22. Art in Early Greece • The Archaic period: 650-490 B.C. Progression from the Egyptian models • Naturalism: attempt to represent objects as they appear in nature • Vase painting: red-figure technique: figures left unpainted • Greeks’ range of feelings and actions

  23. Early Greek Poetry • Homeric epics: long narrative poems; heroic deeds; hero who brings pride to country. Iliad and Odyssey: First masterpieces of Western literature. • “distant and communal perspective…” • Heroes: Achilles and Odysseus • Despite man’s frailties, his life is noble

  24. Sappho’s Lyric Poetry • Lyric poems: brief, expressing feelings, often accompanied by a lyre. • Sappho’s poems expressed her love for her women friends. • Lived her life on the island of Lesbos

More Related