Late Archaic Greek Art
Hellenistic Art
Introduction to Greek Art
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Greek Art
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Cleisthenes establishes a democracy in Athens. The Persian king Darius I threatens the poleis of Ionia, which react by revolting. Miletus and the other colonies fall and are harshly punished. In 490 BC the first Persian war ends, with the victory of the Athenian commander Miltiades at Marathon. The second war (480 BC) is declared by Xerxes I; after several victories and the sack of Athens, the Persians are defeated in the naval battle of Salamis. With Ionian support, the wars continue under the leadership of Athens, which founds the Delian League. The Western Greeks defeat the Carthagians and Etruscans. Under Themistocles and Cimon, Athens begins a period of military and economic imperialism, in a state of permanent conflict with the other Greek cities. Callias signs the peace treaty with Persia (449 BC).
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508 - 507
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Democratic constitution in Athens |
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499 - 494
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Ionian revolt against the Persians |
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490
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First Persian war |
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480
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Second Persian war; Battle of Himera between Greeks and Carthaginians |
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479
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Second Ionian revolt against the Persians |
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478
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Delian-Attic League |
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474
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Naval battle of Cumae between Greeks and Etruscans |
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464 - 455
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Third Messenian war. Wars of Athens against Aegina and Corinth |
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449
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Peace treaty between Greeks and Persians |
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Birth of Aphrodite |
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Bronze Charioteer |
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Herakles from Aphaia |
Kouros, "Kritios Boy" |
Urn with Herakles and Athena |
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Bronze Poseidon (or Zeus) |
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Diskobolos |
Marsyas |
Under Pericles Athens reaches the apex of economic success and cultural and artistic splendor. Its expansionist foreign policy triggers revolts throughout the Hellenic world. Rivalry with Sparta, Corinth, Thebes, and Syracuse leads to the thirty-year Peloponnesian War. Athens eventually capitulates and spends the last decade of the 5th century BC under short-lived oligarchic governments.
The new century opens with the restoration of democracy in Athens; Spartan attacks on Persia; Carthaginian expansionism in Sicily; and other wars. Sparta dominates the Greek scene for several decades before being deprived of its hegemony by Athens and Thebes, the emerging new power. In 356 BC Philip II of Macedonia begins his systematic conquest of Greece, completed in 338 BC at Chaeronea. With the Corinthian League, peace is imposed on the Greek states under the leadership of Macedonia.
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449 - 429
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Hegemony of Pericles in Athens |
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431 - 404
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Peloponnesian War |
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411
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Oligarchic revolution in Athens |
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409 - 392
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Wars between the Greeks and Carthaginians in Sicily |
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403
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Surrender of Athens and fall of the Thirty Tyrants; restoration of democracy |
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404 - 379
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Hegemony of Sparta |
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379 - 362
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Hegemony of Thebes |
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356 - 338
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Philip II of Macedonia overlord of Greece |
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338
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Corinthian League between Greeks and Macedonians |
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Hephaisteion |
| The Hephaisteion is probably the best preserved of Greek temples, however it is not visited much because it sits right below the Athens Acropolis, next to the ancient agora. The Parthenon attracts all the attention -- but a more enlightening show is not far away. |
| Wounded Amazon |
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Eubulides: |
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Pheidias
born: about 490 BC
died: about 430 BC
worked in: Athens
After Greece had recovered from the Persian invasion, there was a time of prosperity and excitement. Athens was head of the Atheanian League and had the Athenian treasury in Delos at its disposal. Perikles (449-429 BC) leader in Athens initiated an ambitious building plan. Pheidias was appointed chief overseer of all city artistic undertakings. New temples and shrines were erected to replace the ones destroyed in the Persian wars. The Parthenon (447-432 BC) and the Propylaia (437-432 BC) on the Acropolis were built. The Hephaisteion was built in Athenian market, the Agoura, about 450-440 BC. And in Eleusis at around the same time the great Hall of Mysteries was built .
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Parthenon |
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Athena Parthenos Reconstruction of the statue from
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Praxiteles
born: Athens; about 385 bc
died: about 335 bc
Praxiteles' father, Cephisodotos, was a sculptor, as were his sons, Kephisodotos the Younger and Timarchos. Praxiteles worked in both marble and bronze, but he was most famous for his marble carving. Praxiteles bronze of Eirine, Goddess of Peace, was displayed in Athens in 370 BC. We know his work mostly from Roman copies and literary references.
Praxiteles introduced his own scheme of proportions for representing the human body, and it is said that he also invented new ways of depicting the gods. He liked to humanize divinities by portraying them as adolescents. He depicted Aphrodite[see below] in the nude, which influenced subsequent portrayals of the goddess.
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The Aphrodite of Knidos is the first statue to depict one of the female goddesses nude; females, goddess or human, were always shown in full dress before this. In fact, he made two statues of Aphrodite and one nude and one dressed. He offered them for sale at the same price. The people of Kos, who had the first choice, chose the draped one. The people of Knidos took the nude one, and it is this nude statue that became famous.
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Late Archaic
Greek Art
Hellenistic Art
Introduction to Greek Art
2003-04-11