Art Beyond the European Tradition...ID 1 ID 2 ID 3 ID 4 ID 5 A A A A A B B B B B C C C C C D D D D D...

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Art Beyond the European Tradition

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White Temple and ziggurat Uruk (modern Warka) Iraq ca. 3,200-3,000 B.C.E., mud brick, Sumerian

ID

What kind of structure is this?

Hypostyle Hall

ID

Seated Scribe, from Saqqara. c. 2400 BC.

Limestone, height 21". Old Kingdom

ID

Hunting Scene, from the tomb of Nebamun, New Kingdom

ID

What does it commemorate?

Palette of Narmer, Pre-Dynastic

Commemorates how Narmer (aka Menes) unified of Upper and

Lower Egypt

ID and Style

Aerial view of the Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem,

687–692. Islamic

What is this?

Where would it be found?

What purpose does it serve?

Mihrab

In the qibla wall in a mosque.

Signifies which wall faces Mecca.

ID

Where would it be found?

Give 2 purposes it served.

Ti Watching a Hippopotamus Hunt, tomb of Ti, Saqqara. c. 2510 - 2460 B.C. E.,Painted limestone relief, height approx. 45". Old Kingdom

Relief in the mastaba of Ti.

• Entertaining the ka in the afterlife

• Scenes of hunting to provision ka in afterlife

• Symbol of triumph of good over evil

ID

Stele with code of Hammurabi from Susa, Iran, ca. 1,780 B.C.E., basalt, 88 in. high, Babylonian

ID

Imhotep, Stepped Pyramid of Djoser, Old

Kingdom

ID

Ashurbanipal hunting lions from the North Palace of Ashurbanipal, Ninevah (modern Kuyunjik) Iraq, ca. 645-640 B.C.E., gypsum, approximately 5 ft. high, Assyrian

ID

Prayer hall of the Great Mosque, Córdoba, Spain, 8th to 10th

centuries.

ID

Victory stele of Naram-Sin from Susa, Iran ca. 2,254-2,218 B.C.E., sandstone, 79 in. high, Akkadian

ID

Last Judgment of Hu-Nefer, from his tomb, Thebes, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290-1280, painted papyrus scroll, 1’6” high, New Kingdom

ID

Where was it originally placed?

What was its purpose?

Pharaoh Khafre from Gizeh – ca. 2500 BCE

Found in his funerary temple

Alternate dwelling place for the ka if the mummy

should deteriorate too much

ID

Artist

What is it modeled after?

Mosque of Selim II, Edirne, Turkey, 1568–

1575.

SINAN

Hagia Sofia, Constantinople,

Byzantine

Why is this artwork appropriate for a mosque?

Imagery consists of architectural, floral,

and geometric designs only. No portraiture of

zoomorphic images.

ID

What shift in practices does this show?

Rock-cut tombs BH 3-5, Beni Hasan, Egypt, 12th Dynasty, ca. 1950 – 1900 BCE.,Middle Kingdom

Shift away from royal burial in pyramids to burial in rock-cut tombs.

ID

Temple of Ramses II from Abu Simbel, Egypt, ca. 1290-1224 B.C.E., colossi approximately 65 ft. high, New Kingdom

ID

Purpose

Statuettes of worshippers from Eshnunna (modern Tell Asmar) Iraq, ca. 2,700 B.C.E., Sumerian

Surrogates for worshippers placed in temple on top of ziggurat. They were eternally praying to the gods

• ID

• What was special about the person for whom theis was made?

• Who designed it?

Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut Deir el-Bahri, Egypt, ca. 1,473-1,458 B.C.E., New Kingdom

She was the first great female monarch whose name was recorded

Senmut

ID

Lamassu (winged human headed bull) from the citadel of Sargon II, Dar Sharrukin (modern Khorsabad) Iraq, ca. 720-705 B.C.E., limestone, 13 ft. 10 in. high, Assyrian

ID site

ID two items in the photo.

Temple of Amen-Re, Karnak, Egypt, ca. 13th century B.C.E., New Kingdom

• Obelisk

• Colossal Statues

• Pylon

ID

Style

List 3 significant aspects of this style or politics

Akhenaton and family with god Aton (sun disk Ra), Tell-el-Amarna, New Kingdom

Amarna

• Moved capital from Thebes to Amarna

• Started monotheistic religion

• Challenge to existing polytheistic priests

• Developed curvilinear style

• More naturalistic and expressive

• Greater status of wife and children

ID

Standard of Ur (war side) from Tomb 779, Royal Cemetery Ur (modern Tell Muqayyar) Iraqca. 2,600 B.C.E. wood, shell, lapis lazuli, red limestone, approximately 8 x 19 in., Sumerian

As a team, decide how many of the points you already have you wish to wager. If you get the question correct, you will earn double the points you wagered.

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As a team, decide how many of the points you already have you wish to wager. If you get the question correct, you will earn double the points you wagered.

If you get the question incorrect, you will lose the points you wagered. Good luck!

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