ARTID111-Ancient Egyptian Art Part 1
ARTID111-Ancient Egyptian Art Part 1
ARTID111-Ancient Egyptian Art Part 1
Objectives
Identify the formal and iconographic characteristics of painting and sculpture from the Early Dynastic to New Kingdom periods Discuss the funerary function and content of Egyptian art and architecture Explain the relationship of Egyptian art and architecture and the Nile River Describe the types of structures built in ancient Egypt and explain their functions Identify how the Egyptian political system and their religious beliefs are reflected in works of art and architecture Discuss the materials and techniques of Egyptian art Explain the development and use of the Egyptian hieroglyphic writing system Identify examples of intercultural contact between Egypt and other ancient civilizations
In the Middle Ages, Egypt's reputation as an ancient land of wonders and mystery lived on. Until the 18th century, people regarded its undeciphered writing and exotic monuments as treasures of occult wisdom, locked away from any but those initiated in the mystic arts.
Ancient Egypt 101 Located in the Nile river valley; civilization developed by about 3,000 BC Protected from invaders by:
mountains to the south vast deserts on both sides Mediterranean Sea to the north
This location kept Egypt separate from the rest of the world, so the Egyptians had a unique and enduring style of life & art for about 3,000 years
Ancient Egypt 101 Communities were made up of: Hunters and fishermen; Soldiers; Slaves; Priests; Scribes; Artists and craftsmen; Farmers and herdsmen Artists, craftsmen and scribes were honored and admired. A scribe is a scholar who could read and write. Their leader , the pharaoh , was believed to be half man, half god. The afterlife of the pharaoh is an important theme in ancient Egyptian art.
1. Architecture - The style developed during the Pre-dynastic period remained unchanged for 2000 years 2. Crafts & Sculpture - Symbolic elements were widely used and strict laws were applied 3. Paintings - The pictures found in Egyptian tombs were connected with the idea of afterlife
Pre-Dynastic Art
The Predynastic, or prehistoric, beginnings of Egyptian civilization are chronologically vague. But tantalizing remains from around 3500 BCE attest to the existence of a sophisticated civilization on the banks of the Nile.
Formation of cultural identity Stone Artifacts Mud minor arts - pottery, vases and bowls Brick architecture
http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/Images/109images/egyptian/hierakonpolis_pntg.jpg
watercolor copy of a
Found along the oldest tombs plaster walls; contains presumed religious scenes and images that include figures that will appear in Egyptian culture for three thousand yearsa funerary cortege of barques, possibly a goddess standing between two upright lionesses, a wheel of various horned quadrupeds, several examples of a staff that became associated with the deity of the earliest cattle culture and one being help up by a heavy-breasted goddess, asses or zebras, ibex, ostriches, lionesses, impala, gazelles, and cattle.
http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/Images/109images/egyptian/hierakonpolis_pntg.jpg
watercolor copy of a
In Predynastic times, Egypt was divided geographically and politically into Upper Egypt (the southern, upstream part of the Nile Valley), which was dry, rocky, and culturally rustic, and Lower (northern) Egypt, which was opulent, urban, and populous.
The Narmer Palette is a 63centimetre tall (2.07 ft), shieldshaped, ceremonial palette, carved from a single piece of flat, soft dark gray-green siltstone. The stone has often been wrongly identified, in the past, as being slate or schist. Slate is layered and prone to flaking, and schist is a metamorphic rock containing large, randomly-distributed mineral grains. Both are unlike the finely-grained, hard, flakeresistant siltstone, whose source is from a well-attested quarry that has been used since pre-dynastic times at Wadi Hammamat.
REVERSE
OBVERSE
It is thought by some to depict the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under the king Narmer. On one side, the king is depicted with the bulbed (flowering lotus) White crown of Upper (southern) Egypt, and the other side depicts the king wearing the level Red Crown of Lower (northern) Egypt whose symbol was the papyrus.
A mastaba is a type of Ancient Egyptian tomb in the form of a flat-roofed, rectangular structure with outward sloping sides that marked the burial site of many eminent Egyptians of Egypt's ancient period. Mastabas were constructed out of mud-bricks or stone.
Mastaba of Faraoun, at Saqqara The mastaba was the standard type of tomb in pre-dynastic and early dynastic Egypt for both the pharaoh and the social elite.
The first monumental royal tomb, built in stone by the architect Imhotep for King Djoser at Saqqara, comprised a stepped pyramid, temple, and other buildings within a large, rectangular enclosure surrounded by a high wall.
Djoser is the best-known pharaoh of the Third dynasty of Egypt. The painted limestone statue of Djoser, now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, is the oldest known life-sized Egyptian statue.In contemporary inscriptions, he is called Netjerikhet, meaning "body of the gods."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Djoser
This first Egyptian pyramid consisted of six mastabas (of decreasing size) built atop one another in what were clearly revisions and developments of the original plan.
http://www.planetware.com/map/saqqara-pyramid-of-djoser-map-egy-spd.htm
Mortuary temples (or memorial temples) were temples constructed adjacent to, or in the vicinity of, royal tombs in the Ancient Egypt. The temples were designed to commemorate the reign of the pharaoh by whom they were built, as well as for use by the pharaoh's cult after death.
Hypostyle Hall
Mortuary of Djoser
Saqqara, Egypt
ca. 2,630-2,611 B.C.E. limestone
http://teachers.sduhsd.k12.ca.us/ltrupe/art%20history%20web/final/chap3Egypt/Mastaba%20Layout.bmp
The Great Pyramid of Giza is the only pyramid in Egypt known to contain both ascending and descending passages.
http://i8.tinypic.com/5x3z0wg.jpg
http://jawbonepig.com/photo/data/media/20/ss-090414-egypt-travel-01_ss_full.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sphinx_of_Giza_9059.jpg
Statues for eternity As already noted, in Egyptian tombs statues fulfilled an important function. Sculptures created images of the deceased to serve as abodes for the ka should the mummies be destroyed. The primary material for funerary objects was stone.
The timeless quality of the portraits of Khafre, Menkaure, and Khamerernebty is enhanced by the absence of any color but that of the dark natural stone selected for the statues.
A second portrait illustrating the rule of relaxed formality and increased realism is the Fifth Dynasty wooden statue of an official named KaAper.
Goats Treading Seed and Cattle Fording a Canal Saqqara, Egypt - Mastaba of Ti | ca. 2450-2350 B.C.E. | painted limestone
Frontalism
In reliefs or paintings, frontalism means that the head of the character is always drawn in profile, while the body is seen from the front. Although the face is to the side, the eye is drawn in full. The legs are turned to the same side as the head, with one foot placed in front of the other. The head is at right angles to the body. Every figure, in paintings or sculptures, stands or sits with a formal, stiff, and rigid posture. The stance of the body is severe, but the faces are calm and serene, and almost always tilted slightly towards the sky, as if the figures were basking in the warm sun.
Rule 4: Scale
Rule 5: Proportions
It was a new age of experiment and invention that grew out of the turbulence of the First Intermediate Period (2185-2055 BC). The forms of the Old era were retained, but the unity of style was broken. Increasing formalism was combined with a meticulous delicacy of craftsmanship. The paintings of the rock-cut tombs at Beni Hasan (e.g., slaves Feeding Oryxes and Cat Stalking) are outstanding for freedom of draftsmanship. In sculpture the sensitive portraits of Senusret 3 and Amenemhet 3 are exceptional in Egyptian art, which at all other times showed a reluctance to portray inner feeling. First obelisks were erected at Heliopolis by Senusret 1 durng this era.
Rock cut Tombs of Beni Hasan Beni Hasan, Egypt, Dynasty XII
ca. 1950-1900 B.C.E.
At Beni Hasan the local nobles during the Middle Kingdom cut large and precise tomb chambers in the limestone cliffs. Architectural features columns, barrel roofs, and porticoes, all carved from the rockprovided fine settings for painted mural decorations.
Rock cut Tombs of Beni Hasan Beni Hasan, Egypt, Dynasty XII
ca. 1950-1900 B.C.E.
Rock cut Tombs of Beni Hasan Beni Hasan, Egypt, Dynasty XII
ca. 1950-1900 B.C.E.
Source: Fletcher, Banister. A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method. Sixth edition, rewritten and enlarged. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1921, p. 105.
http://www.biblearchaeology.org/post/2009/09/09/the-beni-hasan-asiatics-and-the-biblical-patriarchs.aspx
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Exterior_view_of_tombs_of_Khety_and_Barquet_III.JPG
Interior of rock-cut tomb of Khnumhotep Beni-Hasan, Dynasty XII ca. 1985-1795 BCE
http://www.utexas.edu/courses/classicalarch/test1sample.html
Close-up Interior of rock-cut tomb of Khnumhotep Beni-Hasan, Dynasty XII ca. 1985-1795 BCE
http://egyptsites.wordpress.com/2009/02/14/beni-hasan/
A color rendering of the famous Asiatics visiting Egypt (from row 3).
A black-and-white rendering of the colored north wall painting of Tomb III (Khnum-Hotep III).
http://www.biblearchaeology.org/post/2009/09/09/the-beni-hasan-asiatics-and-the-biblical-patriarchs.aspx
The Ancient Egyptian noble Meketre was chancellor and chief steward during the reign of Mentuhotep II and Mentuhotep III, during the Middle Kingdom. His tomb is located in Sheikh Abd el-Qurna, part of the Theban Necropolis contained several wooden replicas, representing the daily activities and life in Ancient Egypt, together with figurines of ships, soldiers and cattle were placed near miniature buildings and gardens.
Amun-Ra
Glossary
adobe The clay used to make a kind of sundried mud brick of the same name; a building made of such brick. amulet An object worn to ward off evil or to aid the wearer. ashlar masonry Carefully cut, regularly shaped blocks of stone used in construction, fitted together without mortar.
Glossary
ben-ben A pyramidal stone; a fetish of the Egyptian god Re block statue In ancient Egyptian sculpture, a cubic stone image with simplified body parts. canon A rule, for example, of proportion. Beauty was considered a matter of correct proportion & sought a canon of proportion, for the human figure & for buildings.
Glossary
canopic jar In ancient Egypt, the container in which the organs of the deceased were placed for later burial with the mummy. capital The uppermost member of a column, serving as a transition from the shaft to the lintel. In classical architecture, the form of the capital varies with the order. chamfer The surface formed by cutting off a corner of a board or post; a bevel.
Glossary
clerestory The fenestrated part of a building that rises above the roofs of the other parts. colonnade A series or row of columns, usually spanned by lintels. demotic Late Egyptian writing engaged column A half-round column attached to a wall, principally on columns & pilasters.
Glossary
Egyptian faience A non-clay based ceramic displaying surface vitrification which creates a bright luster of various blue-green colors. flute or fluting Vertical channeling, roughly semicircular in cross-section and used principally on columns and pilasters. hypostyle hall A hall with a roof supported by columns.
Glossary
fresco Painting on lime plaster, either dry or wet. In the latter method, the pigments are mixed with water and become chemically bound to the freshly laid lime plaster. hieroglyphic A system of writing using symbols or pictures. impost block A stone with the shape of a truncated, inverted pyramid, placed between a capital and the arch that springs from it.
Glossary
ka In ancient Egypt, the immortal human life force. mastaba An ancient Egyptian rectangular brick or stone structure with sloping sides erected over a subterranean tomb chamber connected with the outside by a shaft. mummification A technique used by ancient Egyptians to preserve human bodies so that they may serve as the eternal home of the immortal ka.
Glossary
nemes In ancient Egypt, the linen headdress worn by the pharaoh, with the uraeus cobra of kingship on the front. obelisk A tall four-sided narrow tapering monument which ends in a pyramid-like shape at the top, said to resemble a "petrified ray" of the sundisk. papyrus A plant native to Egypt and adjacent lands used to make paperlike writing material; also, the material or any writing on it. used by an artist.
Glossary
pictograph A picture, usually stylized, that represents an idea; also, writing using such means; also painting on rock. pier A vertical, freestanding masonry support. portico A roofed colonnade; also an entrance porch. pylon The simple and massive gateway, with sloping walls, of an Egyptian temple.
Glossary
sarcophagus (pl. sarcophagi) Latin, consumer of flesh. A coffin, usually of stone. serdab A small concealed chamber in an Egyptian mastaba for the statue of the deceased. sphinx A mythical Egyptian beast with the body of a lion and the head of a human. ushabti In ancient Egypt, a figurine placed in a tomb to act as a servant to the deceased in the afterlife.