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First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective owners. Available free for non-commercial and personal use.
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First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 1: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London.

Ancient Greek Sculpture

All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective owners. Available

free for non-commercial and personal use.

Page 2: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Cycladic2500-2000 BCE

The story of Greek sculpture began around 4000 years ago in the Greek islands, where they made simple white marble models of gods and goddesses.

Page 3: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Minoan1700-1500 BCE

There were few statues found in Minoan Crete. This is the ‘Snake Goddess’ found in a family shrine.

Page 4: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Mycenean

There was no sculpture found in Mycenae. This female painted plaster head is believed to be the head of a sphinx.

Page 5: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

700-500 BCE

This statue was amongst some of the earliest Greek statue. It depicted an archaic goddess. Statues at this time were stiff, unlike those of Ancient Egypt and often carried an Archaic smile.

The Lady of Auxerre. 650-625 BC. 75 cm. Limestone. Archaic. Cretan. Musee du Louvre.

Archaic

Page 6: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Most of the sculptures were created primarily for the purpose of idol worships. Most were less than life-size.

Demeter, goddess of fertility on a throne. 6C BC. Terracotta. Archaic. Cretan. Found in Grammichele, Sicily.

Arc

haic

Page 7: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Funeral markers begin to appear in Greece. The similarity with the Egyptian sculpture can be seen here. But the Greek sculpture carries a smile and the genital is clearly shown. The Greek statue is slightly larger than life-size.

Page 8: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

By the Middle Archaic period from 580 BC – 535 BC, attentions were shifted to kouros and kore sculptures of young men and women, with emphasis on bodily beauty but the poses were still stiff and conformed to stereotypes.

Arc

haic

Page 9: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Kore. 530-520 BC. Marble. Height 2.01 m. Archaic. Acropolis Museum Athens.

Arc

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Page 10: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Kore (no 680). 530-520 BC. Marble. Archaic. Acropolis Museum Athens.

Unlike her male counterpart, she is fully dressed, with elaborate drapery and hair style. She still carries the archaic smile.

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Page 11: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

This was an unusual subject matter, showing a man from Attic, who came to Athens to make a sacrificial offer of a calf to the goddess.

Arc

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The Calf-Bearer (The Moschophoros). 570 BC. Marble. Height 1.65m. Archaic. Acropolis Museum Athens.

It is a pleasing sculpture with the calf gently carried on the shoulder of the owner.

Page 12: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Wounded Warrior from Temple of Aegina. C490-480 BC. Marble. Length 1.78m (Life-size). Late Archaic. On the East Pediment of Aegina Temple. Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek, Munich.

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Page 13: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

The arrival of the Severe Style marked the beginning of the end of the Archaic style. Greek society underwent a transformation to become a leading civilisation in the eastern Mediterranean.

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The Athena of Aegina, wearing a helmet. c460 BC. Aeginetan. Greek. Musee du Louvre.

During this time, the Mediterranean markets were flooded with Greek pottery. Schools of philosophy were flourishing. The city of Athens was in the ascent. Greek art was changing.

Page 14: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Arc

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The Sulky Kore. 480 BC. Marble. Height 1.65m. Archaic. Acropolis Museum Athens.

This is a well proportioned and beautifully sculpted Kore, in severe style. It is called ‘sulky’ because she does not carry the Archaic smile. Carved by the same artist who made the Kritios Boy (on a later slide).

Page 15: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

480-336 BCE

Classical

The concept of beauty was an expression of the inner beauty. Artists used their power of observation, created even more naturalistic sculptures with increasing details.

Blond Boy. 480 BC. Marble. Classical. Acropolis Museum Athens.

Page 16: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Kritios Boy or Critin Boy marked the emergence of a new sculptural style, the Classical style. The proportion of the boy’s torso was near perfection, with life-like accuracy.C

lass

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Sculptures began to shift away from the stiffness of the archaic style to a more life-like posture. The weight of the sculpture was supported by the left leg, while the right leg was bent at the knee. The spine acquired an “S” curve and the shoulder line dipped to the left to balance the action at the pelvis.

Page 17: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Cla

ssic

al These ‘movements’ were achieved by dividing the body into four main sections. The arms and the legs were bent independently. The body above the waist was twisted to produce a more natural posture.

Ares Borghese. 5C BC (Roman copy). Marble. Classical. Height 2.1m. Musee du Louvre.

Page 18: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Horse head. Archaic Style from the Acropolis Museum, Athens.

Horse head of Selene from the pediment of the Parthenon, Athens. 447-432 BC. British Museum, London.

The two horses’ heads summarised the advances made by the Classical Greek. The horse of Selene (above) had just pulled the chariot of Selene across the sky. It was absolutely exhausted, with bulging eyes. Its veins were clearly visible, with opened mouth and nostrils enlarged, grasping for air.

Page 19: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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On the tympanum of the Temple of Marasa. Late 5C BC, Marble. National Museum of Reggio di Calabria

Page 20: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

The statue was offered by a tyrant of Gela (Sicily) to the Delphic sanctuary to commemorate his victory in the chariot race at the Games.

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The Charioteer of Delphi. 474 or 478 BC. Bronze. Height 180cm. Classical. Delphi Museum.

Page 21: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

The original was made by MyronC

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Page 22: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Bronze head of Apollo (?), found in the Tamassos, Cyprus. 470-460 BC. Bronze. Classical. British Museum.

Page 23: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

An exceptional bronze with arms fully extended, an achievement showing the advance made by only a generation of sculptors later, since the austere Archaic style.

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Artemision Bronze (Zeus or Poseidon). 460 BC. Bronze. Height 2.1m Classical. National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Page 24: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 25: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Two full size bronzes of exceptional quality were found in 1972 off the coast of Italy. They are known as the Riace Bronzes.

Page 26: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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The Riace Bronzes

Page 27: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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The Riace Bronzes had gone beyond the depiction of life-like proportions, as in the Kritios Boy. The grove in the back was exaggerated to show a ‘an ideal’ body form.

Page 28: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Philosopher of Porticello. 420-410 BC. Bronze. Classical. Museo Archaeologico Nazional di Reggio Calabria.

Page 29: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Bust of Pericles. c430 BC. Marble. Classical. Vatican Museum, Rome.

Pericles was a prominent Athenian statesman, who successful created the Athenian Empire.

Page 30: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 31: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Praxiteles was a well-known 4C BC sculptor.

Hermes Farness. Roman copy of a c325 BC sculpture. Marble. Height 2.01m. Classical. Original by Praxiteles. Greek. British Museum.

Page 32: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Praxiteles was the first to sculpt the nude female in life -size statue.

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Page 33: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Aphrodite or Venus

Page 34: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Dancing Satyr. Roman copy of a 4C BC statue. Marble. Attrib to Lysippus. Classical. Greek. Galleria Borghese, Rome.

Page 35: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

336-146 BCE

Hellenistic

With the arrival of Alexander the Great, Greek sculptors had taken their art to another level of realism and exaggeration. Their sculptures became even more expressive.

The Bronze Head of Delos. Mid-Late 2C BC. Bronze. Hellenistic. Greek. National Archaeological Museum Athens.

The head showed a new level of realistic individualized features, with a hint of an emotional expression.

Page 36: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

The bronze was found in Olympia, sculpted by Silanion. It is an exceptional piece, showing the battered bruised face of a boxer, marked by swellings and wrinkles.

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Head of a Boxer. 330-320 BC. Bronze. Hellenistic . Greek. National Archaeological Museum Athens.

Page 37: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Sleeping Hermaphrodite, showing the female (top) as well as the male side (bottom). Roman copy of a 2C BC Greek sculpture. Marble. Hellenistic . Greek. Musee du Louvre.

Page 38: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 39: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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This is the story telling sculpture of Laocoon with its exaggerated feeling of pain.

Laocoon & His sons. Roman copy of a 175-150 BC sculpture. Marble. By Agesander, Polydorus and Athenodorus of Rhodes. Hellenistic . Greek. Vatican Museum, Rome.

Page 40: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 41: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Winged Victory of Samothrace. c190 BC. Marble. Span 3.3m. Hellenistic . Greek. Muses du Louvre, Paris.

Page 42: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Page 43: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Molossian Hound. Probably 2C BC. Marble. Hellenistic . Greek. British Museum, London.

The Greek sculptors extended their expressive portrait of human to animals. Only five Roman copies of this Greek bronze are known to exist.

Page 44: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Venus de Milo. c120 BC. Marble. Height 2.02m. Alexandros of Antioch. Hellenistic . Greek. Musee du Louvre, Paris.

Page 45: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Lely’s Venus (Aphrodite Crouching at her Bath). Roman copy of 1C BC Greek original. Marble. British Museum, London.

Page 46: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

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Lely’s Venus (Aphrodite Crouching at her Bath). Roman copy of 1C BC Greek original. Marble. British Museum, London.

Page 47: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

Amongst the ancient civilisations of the world, only the Greek had produced such naturalistic and life-like sculptures. Some 1500 years later, with the arrival of Michelangelo, these sculptures were finally surpassed.

Page 48: First created 15 Mar 2012. Version 1.1 - 5 Apr 2012. Jerry Tse. London. Ancient Greek Sculpture All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective.

All rights reserved. Rights belong to their respective owners. Available free for non-commercial and personal

use.

The End

Music – Zobra, the Greek composed by Mikis Theodorakis.