Art History For Dummies. Jesse Bryant Wilder

Art History For Dummies - Jesse Bryant Wilder


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Praxiteles had a knack for giving statues a soft, sensual look."/>

      Jekatarinka / Shutterstock

      FIGURE 7-7: Praxiteles had a knack for giving statues a soft, sensual look, as you can see in this Hellenistic or Roman copy of his Hermes and the Infant Dionysus (circa 320 BC–310 BC).

      Hallmarks of Praxiteles’s style include these qualities that illustrate a turn toward realism:

       Depicting natural beauty: The fourth century also produced the first free-standing female nudes. Praxiteles stripped Aphrodite, the goddess of love, to reveal all her delicate beauty and grace. Naked Aphrodite was a hit; lots of copies followed. Praxiteles was an expert at depicting delicate curves and making marble look like soft, supple flesh. The original Knidian Aphrodite, like nearly all great Greek statues, has been lost and is only known through Roman imitations and writers’ descriptions.

       Paying tribute to intrinsic grace: Praxiteles’s statue of Hermes and the Infant Dionysus (refer to Figure 7-7) is nearly as famous as his Aphrodite — and just as beautiful. Notice the softness and classical serenity of the facial features and delicate grace of Hermes’s body. The Hermes, once believed to be an original, is now considered to be a superb copy, closer to the spirit of the original than the copy of Knidian Aphrodite.

      Greek vase painting progressed from the primitive Geometric style (tenth through eighth centuries BC, in which people and animals look like stick figures) to the highly realistic Early Classical style in the early fifth century BC. Greece also had a brief flirtation with an Oriental style influenced by trade with Mesopotamia.

      Cool stick figures: The geometric style

      At first glance, the paintings on vases from the tenth through eighth centuries BC look like the stick-figure doodlings of a child. Closer inspection reveals a complex network of geometric patterns: wraparound chains of Greek frets and chevrons (similar to a sergeant’s stripes), squares, dots, and squiggly lines, along with stick figures of people and animals. Geometric vases could also tell stories. The Dipylon krater (see Figure 7-8) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art shows stick figures pulling their hair out in mourning at the funeral pyre of a Greek warrior.

Photo depicts the Dipylon krater, Terracotta illustrates funerary scenes and was used as a grave marker c. 750–735 BC

      Rogers Fund / The Metropolitan Museum of Art

      FIGURE 7-8: The Dipylon krater, Terracotta illustrates funerary scenes and was used as a grave marker c. 750–735 BC

      The Mesopotamian influence is confined to the figures. Odysseus and his men look like Mesopotamians, especially the upper part of the scorpion-man in the bottom band of Puabi’s lyre (refer to Figure 5-2 in Chapter 5). The animals in the middle band and the gorgons (sisters of the snake-haired Medusa) on the belly of the vase also have a Near-Eastern flavor. But the Greeks added their own playful charm to the monsters. If you look closely, you can see that the bug-eyed gorgons show off their sexy left legs like cancan dancers.

      

The belts of interlaced wavy lines (like basket weaving) at the top, bottom, and neck are leftovers from the Geometric period.

      Black-figure and red-figure techniques

      The Oriental style gave way in the sixth century BC to the even more realistic Archaic style. Archaic-style painters employed one of two techniques, either the black-figure technique, which began in the early seventh century BC, or the red-figure technique, which was invented around 530 BC.

      Black-figure vase painting used this technique:

       The artist first sketched his figures with a lead or charcoal stick on the red clay vase, and then filled in the figures with slip (a wet clay mixture). When fired, the slip turned black, and the unpainted part of the vase remained red.

       Artists often added details with purple or red dyed slip, as in the scene of Hercules slaying the Nemean Lion on the amphora (wine-storing vessel) in Figure 7-9. The shield and dress of Athena — here the divine helpmate of Hercules — illustrates the addition of reddish slip. Note: The guy behind Hercules is his nephew Iolaos, ready with a club in case the lion gives Hercules too rough a time.

      Gradually, black figure was replaced by a reverse process known as the red-figure technique, which allowed the artist to create more detailed renderings of figures. In the red-figure technique, the artist

       Sketched the figures, and then incised a -inch border around them.

       Painted in details with slip (historians aren’t sure how — probably with a fine-haired brush or sharp tool).

       Painted the background with slip (which blackened in the kiln) right up to the incised border around the figure.

Photo depicts the goddess Athena watches Hercules tangle with the Nemean Lion on this black-figure amphora, attributed to the Berlin Painter. c. 515–510 bc.

      Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund / Cleveland Museum of Art

      FIGURE 7-9: The goddess Athena watches Hercules tangle with the Nemean Lion (the first of his 12 labors) on this black-figure amphora, attributed to the Berlin Painter. c. 515–510 BC.

      MEDEA GETS AWAY

      The Medea krater, which was painted about 30 years after Euripides’ famous tragedy Medea premiered in Athens, depicts the play’s climax: Medea has just murdered her sons to get revenge on her unfaithful husband, Jason (of Jason and the Argonauts fame). With sword raised, she makes her getaway in a dragon-drawn chariot, a loan from her grandfather Helios, the god of the sun. The defeated Jason looks up helplessly at her, his weapon dangling uselessly at his side. The winged women flanking Medea, the daughters of the night, will fight for him. They are furies whose job is to avenge within-the-family murders. But they’ll have a tough time getting past the sunburst of Helios.

Photo depicts the red-figure Medea krater illustrates the climax of Euripides’ tragedy Medea.

      Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. Fund / Cleveland Museum of Art

      FIGURE 7-10: The red-figure Medea krater illustrates the climax of Euripides’ tragedy Medea. Here Medea makes her getaway after slaying her sons, c. 400 BC.

      Greek architectural styles are perennially popular. The Romans imitated them for centuries. Europeans imitated them from the Renaissance through the 19th century, and 19th-century Americans recycled Greek styles in home building (because they had a democratic look)


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