30 Millennia of Sculpture. Patrick Bade
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СКАЧАТЬ Auxerre Kore (fig. 113), these statues developed both from a local tradition of small figurines, and from the Egyptian tradition of large stone sculpture. The early date of this piece is revealed through the style, which is more decorative than realistic. The eyes and eyebrows are deeply-incised, the contours of the face are flat, and shape of the ear is indicated with concentric, curved lines. The hair is patterned in an Egyptian manner and held back with a band. Over the course of the 6th century, Greek sculpture would lose this patterned, decorative quality and become increasingly realistic and lifelike.

      121. Anonymous, The Naxian Sphinx, Earth Sanctuary, Delphi, c. 560 BCE. Ancient Greek. Marble, height: 232 cm. Archaeological Museum of Delphi, Delphi.

      This graceful creature is a composite of a lion, an eagle, and a woman. The grace and beauty of the sphinx emphasises its strength: this fierce creature was intended to protect all that it could oversee from its position atop a high column. The column and sphinx were erected as a votive offering by the people of Naxos at the sanctuary of Delphi. Such votive offerings, which could also include figurines and statues, reflect the “quid pro quo” nature of the Greeks’ relationship with their gods. They would ask a god for something, promising a votive gift if they got what they asked for. The sanctuary at Delphi was a popular location for this sort of prayer; people from all over Greece would go there to consult the oracle of the Temple of Apollo before they undertook any important act. If they received favour from Apollo, they would leave a votive offering.

      122. Anonymous, Kore 679, called the Peplos Kore, Acropolis, Athens, c. 530 BCE. Ancient Greek. Marble, traces of painting, height: 118 cm. Acropolis Museum, Athens.

      Known as the Peplos Kore, this piece was another victim of the Persian invasion, found buried in the ruins of the Acropolis in Athens. While her heavy garment hangs straight over her body, the sculptor has taken care to show the curves of her shoulders, breasts, and hips. Underneath the straight skirt, she wears the lightweight, crinkly linen chiton. Her full face has more life and realism in it than earlier korai. The vitality of the piece is heightened, for the modern viewer, by the remains of paint on the statue, and also through the very slight movement shown through the upraised arm and the left leg, which steps very slightly forward.

      123. Anonymous, Sarcophagus of a Couple from Cerveteri, c. 520–510 BCE. Ancient Etruscan. Painted terracotta, 111 × 194 × 69 cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris.

      Though their civilisation flourished alongside that of the Greeks, our limited understanding of Etruscan language and culture has left a veil of mystery over the people who lived in Italy before the Roman Republic. Their art was strongly influenced by that of the Greeks, as evidenced by this terracotta sarcophagus with its echoes of the style of the Greek Archaic period. In Etruscan sculpture, however, we find more lively subjects, like this couple, animated in their easy affection for each other. Like so much of Etruscan art, this is a funerary piece, designed for placement in one of the elaborate tombs the Etruscans carved out of the soft volcanic bedrock of central Italy. It reveals the Etruscan view of the afterlife: an eternal party, where men and women would lounge at a banquet, enjoying good food, drink, and the company of their loved ones.

      124. Anonymous, Darius Trampling the Traitor Gaumata, detail of the rock of Bisotun, around 519–512 BCE. Ancient Near East, Plain Media (Iran). Limestone, 300 × 550 cm. In situ.

      125. Anonymous, Frieze of Archers, c. 510 BCE. Ancient Near East, Tell of the Apadana, the palace of Darius I, Susa (Iran). Siliceous glaze polychrome bricks, 475 × 375 cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris.

      126. Anonymous, The Audience of King Xerxes, c. 510 BCE. Ancient Near East, Persepolis (Iran). Museum of Tehran, Iran.

      127. Anonymous, Heracles, Temple of Portonaccio, Veii (Italy), 510–490 BCE. Ancient Etruscan. Terracotta. Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giula, Rome.

      Unlike Greek temples, Etruscan, or Tuscan, temples were traditionally decorated with large terracotta sculptures balanced on the roof, along the ridgepole. One of the most important temples in Etruria was in the city of Veii. The temple at Veii, called the Portonaccio temple, featured a group of figures sculpted out of baked clay, or terracotta, along the ridge of the temple’s roof. The two principle figures of the group are Apollo (fig. 128) and Heracles. Heracles, shown here, is controlling a hind, a deer sacred to the goddess Artemis. The task of capturing the hind was one of the twelve labours of Heracles, a penance he was ordered to perform by the Oracle of Delphi as punishment for killing his family. The pose of Heracles as he rests his foot on the hind (the head of the animal is not preserved) is typical of the dynamism of Etruscan statuary. While Archaic Greek statues were still and static, this Archaic Etruscan example is frozen in motion, engaged in restraining the animal, showing the strength and power of Heracles.

      128. Anonymous, Apollo, Temple of Portonaccio, Veii (Italy), c. 510 BCE. Ancient Etruscan. Terracotta, height: 180 cm. Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giula, Rome.

      129. Anonymous, Kore 594, Acropolis, Athens, c. 500 BCE. Ancient Greek. Marble, height: 122 cm. Acropolis Museum, Athens.

      Kore 594 is another of the large group of statues of maidens from the Athenian Acropolis, buried after the destruction of the Acropolis by the Persian army. While the head is not preserved, the piece retains an air of regal elegance, due mainly to the complex folds of richly decorated clothing. Her right arm would have extended outwards, perhaps holding an offering to Athena. While the male statues of this period were completely nude, the female versions were not only clothed, but accessorised with an elaborate array of robes and fancy jewellery. The many patterns, drapes, and folds the sculptor has carved on her garments lend a rich, decorative quality to the piece, heightened by the effect of bright paint, much of which is preserved on her hair and gown.

      130. Anonymous, Dying Warrior, corner figure, east pediment, Temple of Aphaia, Aegina (Greece), c. 500–480 BCE. Ancient Greek. Marble, length: 185 cm. Glyptothek, Munich.

      Greek temples often featured large sculpture decorating the pediment, the triangular space under the eave of the roof. The first examples of pedimental sculpture show that the early artists were not adept at filling the awkward triangular space with a cohesive composition; the figures in the corners were shrunk to a diminutive scale in comparison to the central figures. However, in this pediment group from the end of the Archaic period, the sculptors showed new skill in conceiving the composition. The central figures, not shown, engage in lively battle, lunging and parrying with swords and shields. One archer crouches to take aim, his low position allowing him to fit into the smaller space toward the corner of the pediment. The Dying Warrior next to him fills that corner, the angle of his falling body perfectly fitting into the smallest part of the pediment. A single, cohesive narrative is thereby created across the triangular space, telling the story of a battle fought by local heroes.

      131. Anonymous, Dancer Supporting the Kline and Lion, late 6th century BCE. Ancient Celtic, Hochdorf (Switzerland). Bronze, height: 30 cm. Württembergisches Landesmuseum, Stuttgart.

      132. Anonymous, СКАЧАТЬ