118
Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean 3500 BCE – 300 CE PART TWO APAH - Valenzuela 36 Works

Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Content Area 2:

Ancient Mediterranean

3500 BCE – 300 CE

PART TWO

APAH - Valenzuela36 Works

Page 2: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Sub Units:

a. Ancient Near East (Stokstad Ch. 2)

b. Ancient Egypt (Stokstad Ch. 3)

c. Aegean / Ancient Greek (Stokstad Ch. 4 & 5)

d. Etruscan / Ancient Roman (Stokstad Ch. 6)

Page 3: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Part III

Aegean Art & The Art of Ancient Greece

Stokstad Chapters 4 & 5

Required Images from AP: 11

Page 4: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

The Aegean in The Bronze Age...

Since AP doesn’t include Aegean art in your image set, this will be a BRIEF overview of the art of the Aegean. I would encourage you to READ chapter four so you have some background, as it is the foundation for Greek art. It WILL be on your next test.

Page 5: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Aegean Cultures & Periods:

Cycladic: 3000-1600 BCE (Cycladic islands in the Aegean Sea) *Produced stylized statuettes of nude standing females and nude males playing musical instruments

Minoan: 1900-1375 BCE (Island of Crete) *Built mixed-use palaces with complex ground plans

Mycenaean: 1600-1100 BCE (Greece) *Built massive citadels marked by cyclopean masonry and corbelled vaulting Aegean art’s three main civilizations:

Page 6: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Fresco Secco - Dry (Egypt)

Buon Fresco - Wet (Aegean)

Page 7: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Mask of Agememnon; Mycenae, Gold, National Museum in Athens

Page 8: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

The Cyclades

Page 9: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

The Minoans: Crete

Page 10: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Minoan Architecture:

Palace Complex at Knossos c. 2000-1375 BCE

Page 11: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 12: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Minoan Sculpture

Page 13: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Mycenaean Art & Architecture

Page 14: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 15: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Art of Ancient Greece

Stokstad Chapter 5

AP Required Works: 10

Page 16: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Greek Artistic Periods:

Archaic (600-480 BCE)

Classical (480-323 BCE)

Hellenistic (323 - 30 BCE)

Page 17: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

HISTORY

Page 18: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

EU: Greek art is characterized by pantheon of gods (particular set of gods; literally a pantheon is a temple or house of worship) that are represented by intricately done images of them decorating large civic or religious buildings.

● Greek art is studied chronologically according to changes in styles● Greek works are not studied according to dynastic rule, as in Egypt, but

according to broad changes in stylistic patterns● Greek art is most known for idealization and harmonic proportions, both in

sculpture and in architecture. ● Greek art has had an important impact on European art, particularly in the

18th century.

Page 19: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

EU: Much ancient writing survives in the fields of literature, law, politics and business. These documents shed light on Greek civilization as a whole, and on Greek art in particular.

● Greek writing contains some of the earliest contemporary accounts about art and artists.

● Epics form the foundation of Greek writing. The texts were at first transmitted orally, but later recorded in writing.

Page 20: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Greek Art & Periods

Geometric Period

The Orientalizing Period

The Archaic Period

The Early Classical Period

The High Classical Period

The Late Classical Period

The Hellenistic Period

The Classical Period

Page 21: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 22: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Greek Pottery

Page 23: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Tomb Pottery:

Page 24: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Geometric Period

Page 25: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Orientalizing Period

Page 26: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Archaic Period600 - 480 BCE

Ajax and Achilles Playing a Game, Exekias, black figure amphora, later 6th century, 61cm, Vatican CIty Museum

Page 27: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 28: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 29: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 30: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 31: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 32: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

archaic sculpture

Page 33: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 34: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Statue of a kouros (youth), ca. 590–580 b.c.; Archaic

Greek, Attic

Naxian marble; H. without plinth 76 in. (193.04 cm)

Page 35: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 36: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 37: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 38: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 39: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 40: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

A cast and painted cast of the Peplos Kore in the Museum of Classical Archaeology in Cambridge, England.

The original is in the Acropolis Museum.

Page 41: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 42: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Classical Period(c.480-323 BCE)

Page 43: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Early ClassicalHigh Classical

Late Classical Hellenistic Period

Page 44: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 45: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 46: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 47: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 48: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

THE CHIASTIC PRINCIPLE

Page 49: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 50: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 51: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 52: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 53: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 54: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 55: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 56: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 57: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 58: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 59: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 60: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Doric + Ionic

Page 61: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 62: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 63: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 64: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 65: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 66: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 67: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 68: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 69: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 70: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 71: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 72: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 73: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 74: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 75: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 76: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 77: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 79: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 80: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 81: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 82: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 83: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 84: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 85: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 86: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Side A

Page 87: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Side B

Page 88: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 90: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Aphrodite of Knidios Late Classical -350 BCEmarbleArtist: Praxiteles

Page 91: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 92: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Hellenistic Period of Greece: Art & Architecture

323 - 31 BCE

Page 93: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 94: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Important to Note:

● Hellenistic Greek States were governed by Kings unlike previous periods where they were democratically ruled by their citizens.

● These rulers were specifically interested in exotic goods and amassed a great deal of them through building commercial relationships with cultures from all over Eurasia

● People moved freely throughout the Hellenistic world and everyone spoke a common language, koine, a kind of colloquial Greek.

Page 95: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

A Few More Notes: ● With this newfound modernity, people also felt alienated and alone. At one time,

they were in complete control of every detail of government and society, and now they were governed by bureaucrats.

● This feeling of alienation can be seen in the art of the time and read in both philosophy and literature.

● Both the art and the writing of the time reveals feelings of intensity, desperation, great emotion and toil, and even protest against commercialism and modernity.

● Art specifically expressed the importance of the individual and represented actual people as opposed to gods and ideal perfection.

Page 96: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 97: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 98: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

by Athanadoros, Hagesandros, and Polydoros of Rhodes Laocoön and his Sons, early first century C.E., marble, 7'10 1/2" high (in the Vatican Museum)

Page 100: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Photo byMrs. V

at The Louvre

Page 101: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 102: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Dying Gaul, ancient Roman marble copy of a lost bronze Greek sculpture, c. 220 B.C.E.

Page 103: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 104: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Acropolis of Pergamon

Page 105: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 106: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 107: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 108: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 109: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 110: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 111: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 112: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 113: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 114: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2
Page 115: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING 2-4.The art of Ancient Greece and Rome isgrounded in civic ideals and polytheism. Etruscan and Roman artists and architectsaccumulated and creatively adapted Greek objects and forms to create buildings andartworks that appealed to their tastes for eclecticism and historicism.

Essential Knowledge 2-4a. Ancient Greek art was produced in Europe and westernAsia, primarily in the region of present-day Greece, Turkey, and southern Italy, from600 B.C.E. to 100 C.E. Etruscan art (c. 700–100 B.C.E., from the region of Etruriain central Italy) and ancient Roman art was produced in Europe and western Asiafrom c. 753 B.C.E. to 337 C.E. The arts of these early western artistic cultures aregenerally studied chronologically. Additionally, archaeological models and stylisticanalysis have identified periods based on stylistic changes. Artworks are assignedto periods according to styles (e.g., archaic Greek), governments, or dynasties (e.g.,the Roman Republic).

Essential Knowledge 2-4b.Art considered Ancient Greek includes works from thearchaic, classical, and Hellenistic periods, as defined according to artistic style,not by political units such as governments or dynasties. Etruscan art is typicallyconsidered as a single cultural unit even though Etruria was comprised of separatecity-states. Roman art includes works from the republican, early imperial, lateimperial, and late antique periods, as defined using governmental structures anddynasties rather than stylistic characteristics. Many Hellenistic works are in factRoman in origin, which favors presenting these traditions at the same time.

Page 116: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Essential Knowledge 2-4c.Ancient Greek, Etruscan, and Roman artists andarchitects were influenced by earlier Mediterranean cultures. Ancient Greekreligious and civic architecture and figural representation are characterized byidealized proportions and spatial relationships, expressing societal values ofharmony and order. Art from the Etruscan and Roman periods is typified by stylisticand iconographical eclecticism and portraiture. Etruscan and ancient Roman artexpress republican and imperial values, power, and preference for conspicuousdisplay. Etruscan and Roman architecture are characterized by investment inpublic structures. Roman architecture is also characterized by borrowing from itsimmediate predecessors (Greek and Etruscan) and by technical innovation.

Essential Knowledge 2-4d.Ancient Greek and Roman art provides the foundationfor the later development of European and Mediterranean artistic traditions. Fromthe 18th century onward, European and American observers admired ancient Greekand Roman ethical and governmental systems, which contributed to prioritizingart and architecture that could be associated with political elites and culturalcapitals (e.g., Rome). More recently, art historians have examined art produced bycontemporary subjects or “provincial” populations.

Page 117: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING 2-5.Contextual information for ancient Greek andRoman art can be derived from contemporary literary, political, legal, and economicrecords as well as from archaeological excavations conducted from the mid-18thcentury onward. Etruscan art, by contrast, is illuminated primarily by modernarchaeological record and by descriptions of contemporary external observers.

Essential Knowledge 2-5a.Some of the earliest written statements about artistsand art making survive from the ancient Greek and Roman worlds. Little survives ofthe rich Etruscan literary tradition that is documented in Roman sources.

Essential Knowledge 2-5b.The Greek, Etruscan, and Roman cultures shared a richtradition of epic storytelling (first orally transmitted, later written) that glorifiedthe exploits of gods, goddesses, and heroes. The texts recorded a highly developedrhetorical tradition that prized public oratory and poetry. Religious rituals andprognostications were guided by oral tradition, not texts.

Page 118: Content Area 2: Ancient Mediterranean part 2

Πεπερασμένος! (Finished!)