Showing posts with label Rise of the Humanists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rise of the Humanists. Show all posts

Monday, 16 April 2012

Kritios (attrib): Kritios Ephebe aka The Critian Boy (480 – 490 BCE)



More than eight centuries after the reign of Akhenaten, as the late Archaic period blurs into the early Classical, we see signs that artists, particularly sculptors, are again beginning to really look at the world around them and reflect what they observe. The use of portraits can, by now, be found on mummy cases of the Greco-Egyptian period, though these are highly stylised.

One artefact has been found that literally embodies a radical new way, not only of observing from life, but in the understanding of life. It is known as The Critian Boy. Its name comes from being attributed by some scholars to the sculptor Kritios, because it bears some resemblance to other works by him and his students.

Remarkable in its naturalistic, anatomical accuracy, this scaled-down statuette (less than a metre tall) shows a significant and sudden shift in the way that the human body is represented and is one of the earliest examples of anatomically accurate sculpture created from careful and direct observation of a subject. Skilfully carved from white marble, it demonstrates a good knowledge, not only of the surface but also of the underlying skeleton and mechanics, of the body. All the major muscle groups are represented, correctly proportioned and the stance is a realistic, weight-bearing one. This marks the dawn of humanism in art.

Preview or Buy Evolution of Western Art

Phideas (attrib): Riace Warriors (circa 450 BCE)



Click image above for reviews or to buy this excellent film about the Spartan stand against the Persian onslaught - historically accurate, all be it dressed with generous artistic licence... 
Click image below for reviews or to buy this book about Classical Greek art 

Myron (attrib): Diskobolos aka The Discus Thrower (circa 460 BCE)


(Roman bronze after Myron)

Alexandros of Antioch (attrib): Venus De Milo (130 – 100 BCE)


Click image above for info or to buy this in-depth examination of Venus de Milo

Romans: Statues in the Greek Style (27 BCE – CE 300)



Illustrated essay about the Roman copying of the Greek style at the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History


Click image below for reviews or to buy this kindle edition of a wide ranging academic study of the subject - high price, but cheaper as an e-book than a tree-book!