Pre Historic Egyptian and Classical Art
Pre Historic Egyptian and Classical Art
Pre Historic Egyptian and Classical Art
APPRECIATION
BRETT ANDREW RIKKE P. BUNGCAYAO
Instructor 1
bpbungcayao@mmsu.edu.ph
Shout out to MR. EDMAR S. DELOS SANTOS for making this PPT ☺
• Pre-Historic Art
• Egyptian Art
• Classical Art
• Rock carvings
©egyptabout.com ©Britannica
Hieroglyphics
©discoveregypt.com
Sphinx
• Mythological creature
• Characterized by a lion’s body and a
human’s head
• Egyptian and Greek Art and
Legend
©The Archeologist
(Britannica, n.d.)
Colossal Statues
The Colossi of
Memnon
• Made of stone
• 59 feet high
• Memnon is a
character from
Greek Mythology ©Egypt Time Travel
Painting
• expression or definition of
concepts of accepted social values
than a mere decoration
• Stone was the major medium of art.
• For painting and sculpture, ancient
Egyptians followed the “law of
frontality” wherein the head faces
forward with the arms set close to
the body and the legs perfectly
balanced. The faces were drawn in
profile with a frontal view of the
eyes which are often
expressionless.
Law of Frontality (Frontalism)
Painting
• They used ocher and fresco-secco
(dry fresco) as their medium.
• Their style is described as
realistic and naturalistic
(Amarna Style).
Sculpture
• relief and free-standing, colossal or
life-size kings, queens, armies, and
servants
• idealized representations, immobile
of features and always frontal in
pose.
• Strong geometric emphasis was
given to the body, with the shoulders
and chest plane resembling an
inverted triangle during the Old and
Middle kingdoms. At the same time,
greater naturalism was attained during
the new kingdom.
Sculpture
“Often created as pairs to
flank the entrances to
temples, or important
sections of them, they
served as guardians,
presenting relatively
accessible images of the
ruler to his people,” The
MET Museum, n.d. Colossal Seated Statue of a Pharaoh
ca. 1919–1878 B.C
© The MET Museum
ANCIENT EGYPT
• Egypt is also known for
its:
• pyramids
• mastabas (tombs)
• temples
• palaces built on posts
known as ‘flower and
bud capitals.’
Classical
Art
WHAT WORD DO YOU
ASSOCIATE WITH THE
TERM “CLASSICAL”?
Classical Art
• originated in ancient Greece
and Rome around the 5th
and 4th centuries B.C.
• characterized by
simplicity, formality, [unknown artist]
Photo by Bibi Saint-Pol, own work, 2007-
Amasis (potter, signed), Amasis Painter
Athens, Greece
Parthenon
(447 B.C. – 432 B.C.)
• Athens, Greece
• Dedicated to the goddess
Athena, the goddess of
wisdom, war, and
handicraft.
• It took 15 years to complete
the temple of the Acropolis
of Athens.
• Sits at the top of the hill.
© IVAN DMITRI/MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES/GETTY IMAGE
Parthenon
(447 B.C. – 432 B.C.)
• Pecriles (Greek Stateman or
respected figure/leader) ordered
the design and construction of
the temple of Athena.
• To replace the earlier temple due to
the Persian invasion.
• Greek Architects: Ictinus and
Callicrates
• Scupltor: Phidias
• Largest Doric-style temple during
its time. © IVAN DMITRI/MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES/GETTY IMAGE
Parthenon
(447 B.C. – 432 B.C.)
3 MAIN AREAS
1. Metopes- 92 carved square blocks depicting the
scenes of Greek Mythology (depicts the mythical
battle between Gods and Giants, between Amazon
Warriors and the Ancient Greeks, between Centaurs
with the Lapiths, and the Trojan War.)
2. Frieze- depicts the Panathenaic procession or the
celebration of Athena’s birthday
3. Pediment- the birth of goddess Athena from the head
of her father Zeus.
Parthenon
(447 B.C. – 432 B.C.)
• Christian Church 6th century A.D.
• Muslim Ottoman Empire ( 1458 A.D.) –
It was converted into a mosque
• 1687- It was converted into an
ammunition depot and shelter.
• The temple was bombarded with
cannonballs, recording hundreds of
casualties and destruction of the
structure.
• It withstand earthquakes, fires, wars,
explosions, and looting. © IVAN DMITRI/MICHAEL OCHS ARCHIVES/GETTY IMAGE
Identify the Order of Column
Identify the Order of Column
Identify the Order of Column
Identify the Order of Column
Identify the Order of Column
Theatre/Drama
Classicism in theater or
drama is best represented by
the works of Greek
dramatists/playwrights:
Aeschylus, Sophocles, and
Euripides.
Classical Art
Classical art is
characterized by
simplicity, formality,
symmetry, and
restraint.
ZEUS is the Olympian god of the sky
and the thunder, the king of all other
gods and men
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Zeus/zeus.html
HERA is the wife of Zeus, the Queen of
Olympus, and the Olympian goddess of
marriage.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Hera/hera.html
APHRODITE is the Olympian goddess of
love, beauty, sexual pleasure, and
fertility.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Aphrodite/aphrodite.html
APOLLO is the Olympian god of light,
music and poetry, healing and plagues,
prophecy and knowledge, order and
beauty, archery and agriculture.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Apollo/apollo.html
ARES is the Olympian god of war.
However, unlike Athena, he represents
merely its destructive capacity and is
typically the personification of sheer
violence and brutality.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Aris/aris.html
ARTEMIS is the Olympian goddess of
the hunt, the moon, and chastity; in
time, she also became associated with
childbirth and nature.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Artemis/artemis.html
ATHENA is the Olympian goddess of
wisdom and war and the adored
patroness of the city of Athens. A virgin
deity, she was also – somewhat
paradoxically – associated with peace
and handicrafts, especially spinning and
weaving.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Athena/athena.html
HADES is the Ancient Greek god of the
Underworld, the place where human
souls go after death. In time, his name
became synonymous with his realm.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Athena/athena.html
HEPHAESTUS is the god of blacksmiths
and fire. Called “the celestial artificer,”
he was also associated with other
craftsmen (sculptors, carpenters,
metalworkers) and, as evident in the
name of his Roman counterpart Vulcan,
with volcanoes.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Hephaestus/hephaestus.html
HERMES is the winged herald and
messenger of the Olympian gods. In
addition, he is also a divine trickster,
and the god of roads, flocks, commerce,
and thieves.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Hermes/hermes.html
POSEIDON is the violent and ill-
tempered god of the sea. One of the
Twelve Olympians, he was also feared
as the provoker of earthquakes and
worshipped as the creator of the horse.
Source: https://www.greekmythology.com/Olympians/Poseidon/poseidon.html
SKY
MARRIAGE & MARITAL STABILITY WAR SEA, EARTHQUAKES AND HORSES HUNT LAW, REASON, MUSIC AND ART
MESSENGER TO
THE GODS GODDESS OF THE DOMESTIC AND
CIVIC HEARTH, THE HOME, SACRED
BEAUTY & LOVE AND SACRIFICIAL FIRE, VIRGINITY,
SON OF ZEUS, FAMILY, AND THE STATE. MEMBER
LAW, REASON, MUSIC AND ART SUPERHUMAN OF THE TWELVE OLYMPIANS.
FORGE STRENGTH
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