Art History Paper
Art History Paper
Art History Paper
Research paper:
Instructor: Student:
Ms. Daphne Lamprou Faton LEKAJ
20040172
December, 2004
INTRODUCTION
fulfills our needs to interpret everything around them including their world and
spiritual beliefs. Through art people release themselves, show their culture and
believe in it. During all the period of human development many civilizations were
formed, many wars were fought and many theories and things were invented.
culture as well as art. In this context, it is impossible to talk about great changes
in our world without mentioning the effects and wealth that ancient Greece gave
to the mankind. Greece has always been associated with the great minds like
Aristotle and Socrates, with the first ‘democracy’ and with its myths, mythology
and of course the natural beauty. Besides the great minds that enlightened our
way of thinking, besides the democracy that enriched our values, Greece
Greek art and architecture has lasting influence with its simplicity and
years the course of Western art has been guided by the legacy of the Greeks.
Their astounding creative power and aesthetic vision affected our art and
architecture. Greek civilization measured its glory as much by the beauty of its
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attitudes, and forms of Western culture. Greek artists first established mimesis
(imitation of nature) as a main principle for art. The nude human figure in Greek
art reflects a belief that "Man is the measure of all things". Another Greek legacy
that the West has inherited its architecture. Many of the structural elements,
decorative motifs, and building types that were established in Ancient Greece are
still used in architecture today. Thus we commonly accept Greek culture as the
“foundation” or “roots” of our own metaphorical terms which strongly connote the
concept of stability, a stability that Western culture has deemed a primary and
When you hear about ancient Greek art, the first things that come to your
mind are the great Acropolis, the temples dedicated to gods and many Byzantine
churches and monuments around the land. Personally, as I go along and read
about the ancient Greek art there are lots of things that remain in my mind. It
seems that every period of Greek art has its own importance, significance and
unity. I appreciate a lot the creations of peaceful and nature lovers, Minoans, the
houses of the Mycenaean that the Greeks continued to build long after and the
pottery during the geometric period. Also what impressed me a lot are, the
archaic style developed from the use of oriental motifs, the sculptures of
Polyklytos during classical period and the masterpieces of sculpture during the
Hellenistic period. However, what I can not take out of my mind are the beautiful
sculptures made by great hands of Praxiteles during the late classical period.
These great works of him with their reflection of people at that time, depicted
perfectly, somehow are attached to my mind and make me think of people at that
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time and their great achievements. With respect to this, below I will explain firstly
the late classical period, the principles of Praxiteles work and two master
This period has an immense importance in the Classical Greek art due to
its different focus and approach towards art. After the sculptures made according
mathematical formulas, in the late classical period Greek art began to focus more
on the individual and on the real world of appearances rather than on the
community and the ideal world of perfect beings and perfect buildings. Also at
this time there was an increased emphasis on the expression of emotion in art.
Anatomical accuracy has been achieved and the sculptors tended to make
bodies more absolutely symmetrical than they ever are in life (Boardman, 12).
Powerful emotional effects are typical of the sculpture and a new feeling for
period.
Personally, I can say that I understood and felt the changes in this period
his works, one of the greatest masters of that time (Kleiner, 145). He is one of the
most famous and esteemed sculptors of Greek culture. Praxiteles style always
set him above the other sculptors of his time. He always tried new techniques to
make his artwork "ripple with life" and be as natural as possible. To get that
naturalistic representation he would use smooth curves, light and shadow. One
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of the techniques that he used was to polish the marble (which was his favorite
stone to sculpt with) to make the light reflect and contour off of the statue giving it
a lifelike essence. His sculpting style was delicate and luminous, and gave to the
body a sensuous texture. The characteristics of his work – relaxed and graceful
stand, extraordinary models and delicate contours, are shown in his best known
Praxiteles initiated in Greek sculpture; however, it also may have reflected the
influence of women in his life. "The first female nude in Greek monumental
of a bath, her right hand modestly concealing her genitals. The bracelet on her
left arm betrays the courtesan Phryne as the artist's model. Praxiteles's creation
(Dictionary of Art, 434). The lost original sculpture of the Aphrodite of Knidos,
carved from Parian marble, is known only through copies of Roman date, but
Pliny considered it as “superior to all the works, not only of Praxiteles, but indeed
in the whole world.” It made Knidos famous and many people sailed there just to
see the statue, where “it was possible to view the image of the goddess from
every side”. According to Pliny, some visitors were “overcome with love for the
statue”. The figure was enormously influential later in many derivative versions,
where the concealing motif is made more explicit by her attempt to cover both
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Fig.1
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Yet there can be no question that the statue’s immense fame derives from
assumptions about gender, sexuality, and propriety would have forced a complex
discourse in the mind of the viewer, whether male or female (Fullerton, 74).
nude caused such a sensation in his time. Female nudity was rare in Greek art
household use. In addition, Praxiteles’ Aphrodite is not a cold and remote image.
In fact the goddess engages in a trivial act out of everyday life. She has removed
her garment, draped it over a large hydria and is about to step into the bath. All
these characteristics make this sculpture a revolutionary step in Greek art which
affected future sculptures and masters and make it one of the greatest works in
its time.
by the hand of the master himself but now generally considered a copy of the
highest quality. The statue of Hermes and the infant Dionysos (Fig.2) found in
the Temple of Hera at Olympia brings to the realm of monumental statuary the
theme the Phiale Painter had chosen for a white ground krater a century earlier
(Kleiner, 146). Hermes has stopped to rest in a forest on his journey to Nysa to
leans on a tree tank and his slender body forms a sinuous, shallow S-curve that
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is the hallmark of many Praxiteles’ statues. He looks of dreamily into space while
he dangles a bunch of grapes (now missing) as a temptation for the infant, who is
to become the Greek god of the vine. This is the kind of tender and very human
interaction between an adult and a child that one encounters frequently in real life
but that had been absent from Greek statuary before the fourth century.
the subject through great facial expression. You do not even have to look at the
body for an example of what the subject was feeling. All you need to do is to
look at the face. From this statue we can conclude that Praxiteles did take great
pleasure in creating the human form. He used the nude human form in almost all
of his full body sculptures. Beauty was mere seductiveness to him and he
explored greatly into the more sexual aspect of sculpture. Praxiteles's greatest
ambition was to produce the illusion of life. He wanted his works to be as real as
with infant Dyonisos that looks like it could jump to life at any moment. This was
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Fig.2
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Conclusions
At the end I can say that the late classical period had a great impact in
further developments of Greek art. The different focus and approach towards art
has made this period unique in the history of Greek art. The period focused
more on the individual and the real world appearances. Powerful emotions and
distinctive individual styles and works. Among the great style, it is worth to
appeal. It was impossible to write about ancient Greek art in general and not to
mention the master works of him. He was unique and his sculptures were
inspiring for other sculptors as well. Considering all the works of him, personally I
can say that I found Praxiteles a ground-breaking artist. He may not have been
the best, but his uniqueness in style set him above all the old masters of his time.
His stylistic mannerisms set a very high standard for excellence in sculpting and
blazed a path for sculptors later in time. He gave the body natural life and a
luminous essence that no other sculptor had ever come close to before.
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Bibliography:
1972
2000.
5. Kleiner, Fred S. et co. “Gardner’s – Art through the Ages”, 12th Edition.
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