|
Sculpture
History Of Sculpture
Sculpture In Ancient Times
Sculpture
as an art form goes back to Prehistoric times. Most Stone
Age statuettes were made of ivory or soft stone, however
some clay human and animal figures have been found. Small
female statues known as Venus figurines have been found
mainly in central Europe. The Venus of Willendorf (24,000-22,000
BCE), from the area of Willendorf, Austria, is a well-known
example.
Later,
in the Near East, (the area between the Tigris and the Euphrates
Rivers), the Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian kingdoms
flourished. Materials used for sculpture during this time
included basalt, diorite (a type of dark, coarse-grained
stone), sandstone, and alabaster. Copper, gold, silver,
shells, and a variety of precious stones were used for high
quality sculpture and inlays. Clay was used for pottery
and terra cotta sculpture. Stone was generally rare and
had to be imported from other locations.
Sculptures
from the Sumerian and Akkadian period generally had large,
staring eyes, and long beards on the men. Votive stone sculptures
of this type from 2700 BC were discovered at Tell Asmar.
Many masterpieces have also been found at the Royal Cemetery
at Ur (2650 BC). Among them are a wooden harp with gold
and mosaic inlay with a black-bearded golden bull's head.
Sculpure In Babylonian Times
The
history of the Babylonian period is considered to begin
with the reign of Hammurabi, in 1750 BC. Hammurabi was famous
for his code of law. A bearded head, made of diorite, is
believed to represent Hammurabi. The head has the wide open
eyes, typical of the time period.
Also
well-known is the lamassu, a human-headed winged lion from
883-859 BC. A unique feature of this piece is that it is
carved with five legs, so that it can have four legs visible
if viewed from the side. The piece was excavated at Nimrud
(in northern Mesopotamia), and was donated to the New York
Metropolitan Museum of Art by John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in
1932.
Sculpture In Ancient Egypt
One
of the earliest examples of Egyptian sculpture is the Palette
of King Narmer, from 3100 BC. The palette, which was used
for mixing eye make-up, was carved in relief, and portrayed
the victory of Upper Egypt over Lower Egypt.
The
Sphinxes are another form of Egyptian sculpture. The Sphinxes
were statues of deities with the body of a lion and the
head of an animal or a man, often made to look like the
Pharaoh. The most famous is the Great Sphinx of Giza, located
near the pyramids. It is about 60 feet high and 240 feet
long, and was built in 2500 BC.
Another
example of Egyptian sculpture are the statues of the Pharaoh
Akhenaton and his Queen, Nefertiti (1350 BC). The statues
are carved from limestone and are painted. There is also
a very famous statue of Nefertiti from the same time period.
These
are only a few of the many sculptures produced in ancient
Egypt. Many sculptures can now be seen at the Egyptian Museum
in Cairo.
Aegean Sculpture
The
Aegean civilization covers the time period of 3000-1200
BC, during the Bronze Age, in the area of the Aegean Sea.
The Aegean civilization can be broken down into three main
divisions, the Cycladic, the Minoan and the Mycenaean.
The
Cycladic culture developed on the Cycladic Islands, a group
of islands in the Aegean Sea, southeast of Athens. Cycladic
culture developed pottery, often decorated with rectangular,
circular, or spiral designs. They also produced silver jewelry.
Characteristic of their sculpture are marble sculptures
of the human figure ranging from a few inches in size to
life-size. The figures are usually nude females with their
arms crossed over their abdomen. Other sculptures included
seated or standing musicians. Examples of sculptures of
musicians include a seated lyre player from 2000 BC. Statues
of a lute player and a harpist were found together in a
single grave on Keros, dating from 2700 - 2750 BC.
The
Minoan culture developed mainly on Crete, especially at
Knossos and Phaistos. The civilization was named after King
Minos and reached its peak in the second millennium BC.
Minoan
sculpture consists mainly of a few statuettes and carved
semi-precious stone seals. One of the most well-known sculptures
is that of a snake goddess, of a goddess holding a snake
in each hand, from Knossos, 1600 BC. Bulls were also depicted
in both paintings and sculptures of Minoan times. A rhyton
(drinking horn) in the shape of a bull was found in Knossos
from 1500-1450 BC. In addition, there are many double-bladed
axes, called "labrys", probably related to sacrifice.
Some of the axes are taller than an adult.
The
Mycenaen culture flourished in the late Bronze Age, on the
mainland of Greece. According to legend, it was the Greeks
of Mycenae under King Agamemnon that fought the Trojan War.
The
Mycenaeans adorned their architecture with relief carvings.
A relief is a design or scene that is carved into a flat
area, so it is like a three dimensional picture. A famous
example of this is the Lion Gate in the outer wall of the
Palace of Mycenae (14th & 15th centuries BC). Above
the lintel (top of the doorway), two lions are carved to
fit into a triangular shape.
The
Mycenaeans also produced funeral masks. A famous example
is a gold mask found in the royal tombs of Mycenae from
ca. 1500 BC. Also found in a tomb were gold cups from Vaphio,
with bulls portrayed in relief.
Sculpture Of Ancient Rome
Classial
Roman sculpture began with the sack of the Syracuse in 212
B.C. during the second Punic war with Carthage. A wealthy
outpost of Greek civilization on the island of Sicily, Syracuse
was thoroughly plundered and most of its magificent Hellenistic
sculpture was taken to Rome where it replaced the earlier
styles of the Etruscan tradition. The Romans continued to
admire the Hellenistic style, and eventually workshops throughout
the Greek world (especially Asia Minor) provided the statuary
without which no patrician villa was complete.
Some different kinds of Classical Roman sculpture are as
follows :
w
Relief
It
shallows three dimensional carvings on flat surfaces, used
for architectural works such as columns, arches and Temples.
An example of this type of sculpture would be the Ara Pacis
(Altar of Peace)from 13 - 9 B.C. The Ara Pacis was a momument
to the Pax Romana (The Roman Peace), 200 years of peace
and prosperity ushered in by Emperor Augustus.
Another
example of relief sculpture would be Trajan's column, dating
from 106 - 113 A.D. adorned with scenes of Trajan's battles
in a continuous spiral around the column.
w
Free Standing Sculpture(such as Statues)
Most
of this work was destroyed during barbarian invasion or
Christian rebuilding. The marble was burned for lime and
the bronze melted for other purposes. An outstanding example
of a piece that survived is the Equestrian statue of Marcus
Aurelius (Marcus Aurelius on a horse), dating from 161 -
180 A.D. Legend has it that the emperor's imposing demeanor
spared the piece from destruction. Common locations for
statues were in the temples, the public baths or the city
Forum (the social and commercial center of the town).
w
Portrait Sculpture
It
often busts of famous Romans. Subjects for these sculptures
would include various patricians and especially emperors
- multiple copies of which were circulated around the empire.
Roman portrait sculpture embodied Roman civic virtues and
have set the standard for European (and American) public
portrait sculpture ever since. One well known example is
the bust of Emperor Constantine.
Sculpture In The Renaissance
Renaissance
means rebirth and this period takes its name from the renewed
interest in secular, Classical art and literature developed
among the ruling and mercantile elites of Northern Italy
in the 15th Century. Michelangelo, Donatello, and Verocchio
are three of the best known Italian sculptors of this period,
while Tilman Riemanschneider's name stands out among those
north of the Alps.
The
first appearance of the free-standing, erotic,young male
nude connects this period to the ancient Greeks and Romans
-- but the sculptural style borrows equally, if not more,
from the late Gothic masters like Lorenzo Ghiberti, Tullio
Lombardo, Jacobo Della Quercia, and Andrea Pisano. Donatello
is usually singled out as the first master of the Renaissance
-- with dazzling complexity in his deep perspective reliefs
and virtuosity everywhere in his large body of work. The
Renaissance period ends with the beginning of the 17th Century,
as sculpture is primarily called to serve a revived and
militant Roman Catholicism.
But
its many great sculptural monuments continued to make the
cities and churches of Northern Italy important tourist
centers through the 18th, 19th, 20th centures -- and up
to the present day.
|