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Aegean Greece.  Main Periods of Greek History  3500 – 1100 BCE – Helladic Age  1100 – 800 BCE – Doric Dark Ages  800 – 400 BCE – Classical Greece.

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Presentation on theme: "Aegean Greece.  Main Periods of Greek History  3500 – 1100 BCE – Helladic Age  1100 – 800 BCE – Doric Dark Ages  800 – 400 BCE – Classical Greece."— Presentation transcript:

1 Aegean Greece

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3  Main Periods of Greek History  3500 – 1100 BCE – Helladic Age  1100 – 800 BCE – Doric Dark Ages  800 – 400 BCE – Classical Greece  332 – 30 BCE – Hellenistic Civilization

4 Aegean Greece  Ancient Aegean History – Chronology  3000 – 2000 BCE – Cycladic Civilization appears and develops on Cycladic Islands  3000 – 1450 BCE – Minoan Civilization appears and develops on Crete – use of Linear A  1623 BCE – Eruption of volcano on Thera  1600 – 1100 BCE – Mycenaean Civilization appears on Peloponnesian Peninsula (southern part of mainland Greece)  1460 BCE – Mycenaeans invade and conquer Minoan capital of Knossos

5 Aegean Greece  1400 BCE – Mainland Greeks destroy Knossos – and most traces of Minoan culture disappear. Linear B in general use at this time  1250 – 1240 BCE – Trojan war  1100 BCE – Dorian invasion, fall of Mycenaean civilization; Beginning of dark ages  800 BCE – The Iliad and The Odyssey written down as Greeks adopt Phoenician alphabet and dark ages end

6 Aegean Greece  Cycladic Civilization  Cycladic Islands are so-named because they ‘cycle’ around the birthplace of Apollo and his twin sister Artemis  No written records, so their artwork is a main source of information about them  Their culture was mainly Neolithic

7 Aegean Greece  Minoan civilization  The Minoan civilization is named after the legendary king Minos who was the fabled ruler of Crete  Minoans were mainly a maritime culture : dealing with trading and fishing  The center of Minoan culture was the palace some examples are at Knossos, Phaistos and Mallia  Knossos was the center of political life (the capital)

8 Aegean Greece  Characteristics of Minoan Art:  Dynamic Colors  Swirling Patterns  Organic themes – Marine life the predominant motif  Playful  Decorative Designs

9 Minoan vs. Egyptian Painting

10 Aegean Greece  Mycenaean Civilization  Culture is named after the major city Mycenae, although sometimes called Achaeans - especially by Homer in the Iliad and Odyssey  Art was heavily influenced by Minoans, with an additional focus on power by the Mycenaeans  Mycenaeans were warlike and aggressive

11 Aegean Greece - Corbelling

12 Aegean Greece  Mycenaean and Archaic Greek Civilizations  Developed on mainland Greece  First true Greek speakers  Archaic Greeks Divide into 3 groups:  Aeolians  Ionians  Dorians

13 Aegean Greek - Art  Cycladic Female Figure  3 rd Millennium BCE  Cycladic Islands, Greece  Sculpture  Thought to have a connection with fertility and also with death  Appears similar to modern art

14 Statuette of Seated Harp Player ca. 2,800-2,700 B.C.E. Cyclades Sculpture marble 11 1/2 in. high Possibly related to mythology / Orpheus

15 Minoan Art  Spring Fresco (Landscape)  1630 – 1500 BCE  Akrotiri, Thera  Painting  Natural world is focus, use of color  Landscape with Flowers  Not an attempt at exactitude and realism

16 Minoan Art  Palace of Knossos  1700 - 1300 BCE  Knossos, Crete  Architecture  Palace structure with courtyard – first building with running plumbing  Also had a labyrinth

17 Palace at Knossos (plumbing) Crete, Greece ca. 1,700-1,300 B.C.E.

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19 Knossos

20 Minoan Art  Palace of Knossos (Minos)  1700 – 1300 BCE  Knossos, Crete  Architecture  The Minoans used inverted columns that tapered down rather than up

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23 Minoan Art  Bull Leaping Fresco (Toreador Fresco)  1550 – 1450 BCE  Knossos, Crete  Painting  Fresco is a painting technique using wet plaster  Coming of age trial or religious ceremony

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25 Dolphin Fresco ca. 1,450-1,400 B.C.E. Knossos, Greece Fresco Painting Located in the Queen’s megaron (bedroom) Marine life was key Minoan theme

26 Marine style octopus jar ca. 1,500 B.C.E. Palaikastro, Greece Pottery 11 in. high Marine theme the focus even in pottery

27 Minoan Art  Kamares Ware  (Three handled pithos)  1800 BCE  Phaistos, Crete  Pottery  Made of terra cotta  Kamares ware is recognized by its color  Most pottery motifs were related to the sea

28 Minoan Art  Palace Style 3 Handled Vase  1400 BCE  Knossos, Crete  Pottery  Made of terra cotta  Design is more linear than circular – plants seem to sprout up the vase  Natural world is a main motif

29 Snake Goddess ca. 1,600 B.C.E. Knossos, Greece Sculpture faience 13 1/2 in. high Made of ivory – proves trade was going on with Egypt Related to some goddess cult – different types

30 Flotilla, detail of Miniature Ships Fresco from Room 5, West House ca. 1,650 B.C.E. Akrotiri, Thera, Greece Painting Fresco approximately 17 in. high Island was destroyed by volcanic eruption, shows how important the sea was to daily life

31 Minoan Art

32 Aegean Greece  Mycenaean Art Characteristics  Heavy use of gold  Large stone buildings and fortifications (Cyclopean Stones)  Painting is same as Minoan, except for themes  Focus on power and aggression

33 Mycenaean Art  The Lion Gate  1250 BCE  Mycenae, Greece  Architecture/Relief Sculpture  Example of Cyclopean stones (large stones thought be Greeks to be built by Cyclops)  Lion’s used to portray power, intimidate and protect city  Entrance to city of Mycenae

34 Mycenaean Art  Treasury of Atreus  1300 – 1250 BCE  Mycenae, Greece  Architecture  Believed to be the tomb of the Atreus family - King Agamemnon from Homer’s Iliad  Called Bee-hive tombs because of their shape  Use of corbelled roofing

35 Mycenaean Art

36  Mask of Agamemnon  1250 – 1200 BCE  Mycenae, Greece  Relief Sculpture  Made of gold, actual death mask of the deceased  Attributed to Agamemnon but not verified – if true it would be the only artifact of a man involved in Trojan War

37 Inlaid dagger blade with lion hunt from Grave Circle A ca. 1,600-1,500 B.C.E. Mycenae, Greece Craftwork bronze, inlaid with gold, silver and niello 9 in. long Symbols of power prevail and use of precious metals

38 Mycenaean Art

39 Early Greece  1000 – 800 BCE – Rise of the Greek city-states  900 – 725 BCE – Geometric Style is used  776 BCE – First Olympic Games (Greeks measured time from this occasion)  750 BCE – Phalanx with Hoplites is used as basic battle formation  750 – 550 BCE – Greeks begin to colonize Mediterranean  725 – 650 BCE – Orientalizing Style is used

40 Archaic Period  650 – 480 BCE – Archaic Period  621 BCE – Draco establishes Athenian laws  594 BCE – Solon elected Archon begins democratization of Athens “Architect of Democracy”  570 BCE – First silver coins minted in Athens (Attic Silver Drachma)  518 - 438 BCE – Pindar’s life – Ancient Greece’s greatest lyric poet  510 – 508 BCE – Athens created the first democracy

41 Archaic vs. Egyptian Sculpture

42 Archaic Art – Classical Orders

43 Archaic Greece - Art  Dipylon Krater  750 BCE  Athens, Greece  Pottery  In geometric style – shapes are predominant motif –  Even animals and people are in shapes rather than realistic

44 Archaic Greek Art  Horse  8 th century BCE  Athens, Greece  Sculpture  Even sculpture of the period was in geometric style  Forms of nature were simplified into shapes

45 Archaic Greek Art  Levy Oinochoe  650 BCE  Eastern Greece  Pottery  Orientalizing style breaks from geometric shapes  Eastern motifs like lotuses, rosettes derived form Egypt and Mesopotamia  Figures become more important

46 Archaic Greece - Art  Achilles and Ajax  550-525 BCE  Athens, Greece  Pottery  Artist: Exekias  Black figured style – showing scene from mythology  Painted with black glaze on red clay

47 Archaic Greek Art  Death of Sarpedon  515 BCE  Athens, Greece  Pottery  Artists: Euxitheos and Euphronius  Red figure style – replaced black figure style as is allowed for more emotional scenes to be portrayed

48 Archaic Greece - Art  Paestum Temples  Hera I and Hera II  560 BCE & 500 BC  Architecture  Paestum, Italy  Doric Temple style  Best preserved early Greek temples

49 Archaic Greece - Art  Hera I is in enneastyle – 9 columns on sides  Hera II is in hexastyle – 6 columns on sides

50 Hera I and Hera II

51 Archaic Greece - Art  Standing Youth (Kouros)  600 - 590BCE  Attic, Greece  Sculpture  First nude in ancient art; note again similarities to Egyptian sculpture  Although foot is forward weight is still equally distributed  Note almost fully free standing as opposed to Egyptian  Known as New York Kouros because of its location today  Kouros means standing male nude

52 Archaic Greece - Art  Kore from Chios  520 BCE  Chios, Greece  Sculpture  The stiffness is gone, the drapery is refined and even flows about her body; she is wearing a garment called a Chiton; traces of color exist; considered the best Kore  Kore mean standing female

53 Temple of Aphaia ca. 500-490 B.C.E. Aegina, Greece Architecture Typical Early Greek/Classical Temple Open on all sides, 3 steps up Unique because ramp for livestock still exists

54 Temple of Aphaia Plan

55 West pediment of the Temple of Aphaia ca. 500-490 B.C.E. Aegina, Greece Relief Sculpture marble approximately 5 ft. 8 in. high at center Sculptures were arranged to fit inside pediment triangle exactly

56 Dying warrior from the West pediment Temple of Aphaia ca. 500-490 B.C.E. Aegina, Greece Relief Sculpture marble approximately 5 ft. 2 1/2 in. long Note the emotionless and even the smile

57 Dying warrior from the East Pediment Temple of Aphaia ca. 490-480 B.C.E. Aegina, Greece Relief Sculpture marble approximately 6 ft. 1 in. long Dramatic change in art in a short 10 year span

58 Ancient colors

59 Aegean Art  The End... Next Lecture...  Classical and Hellenistic Greece


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