EXTANT REMAINS: The frescos that are left to us to-day are largely the
work of mechanical decorators rather than creative artists. They are to be seen
in Rome, in the Baths of Titus, the Vatican, Livia's Villa, Farnesina,
Rospigliosi, and Barberini Palaces, Baths of Caracalla, Capitoline and Lateran
Museums, in the houses of excavated Pompeii, and the Naples Museum. Besides
these there are examples of Roman fresco and distemper in the Louvre and other
European Museums. Examples of Etruscan painting are to be seen in the Vatican,
Cortona, the Louvre, the British Museum and elsewhere. oil paintings for sale uk
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Showing posts with label CHAPTER III.GREEK PAINTING. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHAPTER III.GREEK PAINTING. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
In the beginning of the Empire(GREEK PAINTING)
In the beginning of the Empire tablet or panel painting was rather abandoned
in favor of mural decoration. That is to say, figures or groups were painted in fresco
on the wall and then surrounded by geometrical, floral, or architectural designs
to give the effect of a panel let into the wall. Thus painting assumed a more
decorative nature. Vitruvius says in effect that in the early days nature was
followed in these wall paintings,original oil paintings, but later on they became ornate and overdone,
showing many unsupported architectural façades and impossible decorative
framings. This can be traced in the Roman and Pompeian frescos. There were four
kinds of these wall paintings. (1.) Those that covered all the walls of a room
and did away with dado, frieze, and the like, such as figures with large
landscape backgrounds showing villas and trees. (2.) Small
paintings separated or framed by pilasters. (3.) Panel pictures let into the
wall or painted with that effect. abstract oil paintings for sale (4.) Single figures with architectural
backgrounds. The single figures were usually the best. They had grace of line
and motion and all the truth to nature that decoration required. Some of the
backgrounds were flat tints of red or black against which the figure was placed.
In the larger pieces the com position was rather rambling and disjointed, and the
color harsh. In light-and-shade and relief they probably followed the Greek
example. paintings reproductions
ROMAN PAINTERS: During the first five centuries Rome was between the
influences of Etruria and Greece. The first paintings in Rome of which there is
record were done in the Temple of Ceres by the Greek artists of Lower Italy,
Gorgasos and Damophilos (fl. 493 B.C.).
They were doubtless somewhat like the vase paintings—profile work, without
light, shade, or perspective. At the time and after Alexander Greek influence
held sway. Fabius Pictor (fl. about 300 B.C.) is
one of the celebrated names in historical painting, and later on oil painted portraits Pacuvius,Metrodorus, and Serapion are mentioned. In the
last century of the Republic, Sopolis, Dionysius, and Antiochus
Gabinius excelled in portraiture. Ancient painting really ends for us with
the destruction of Pompeii (79 A.D.), though after that
there were interesting portraits produced, especially those found in the Fayoum
(Egypt). oil paintings wholesale
ETRUSCAN AND ROMAN PAINTING(GREEK PAINTING)
Books Recommended: See Bibliography of Greek
Painting and also Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria; Graul, Die
Portratgemalde aus den Grabstatten des Faiyum; Helbig, Die Wandgemalde
Campaniens; Helbig, Untersuchungen uber die Campanische Wandmalerei;
Mau, Geschichte der Decorativen Wandmalerei in Pompeii; Martha,
L'Archéologie Étrusque et Romaine. oil paintings for sale
ETRUSCAN PAINTING: Painting in Etruria has not a great deal of
interest for us just here. It was largely decorative and sepulchral in motive,
and was employed in the painting of tombs, and upon vases and other objects
placed in the tombs. It had a native way of expressing itself, which at first
was neither Greek nor Oriental, and yet a reminder of both. Technically it was
not well done. Before 500 B.C. it was almost childish
in the drawing. After that date the figures were better, though short and squat.
Those on the vases usually show outline drawing filled in with dull browns and
yellows. Finally there was a mingling of Etruscan with Greek elements, and an
imitation of Greek methods. It was at best a hybrid art, but of some importance
from an archæological point of view. original oil paintingsROMAN PAINTING: Roman art is an appendix to the art history of Greece. It originated little in painting, and was content to perpetuate the traditions of Greece in an imitative way. What was worse, it copied the degeneracy of Greece by following the degenerate Hellenistic paintings. In motive and method it was substantially the same work as that of the Greeks under the Diadochi. The subjects, again, were often taken from Greek story, though there were Roman historical scenes,genre pieces, and many portraits. paintings reproductions
There are few wall or panel pictures(GREEK PAINTING)
EXTANT REMAINS: There are few wall or panel pictures of Greek times in
existence. Four slabs of stone in the Naples Museum, with red outline drawings
of Theseus, Silenos, and some figures with masks, are probably Greek work from
which the color has scaled. A number of Roman copies of Greek frescos and
mosaics are in the Vatican, Capitoline, and Naples Museums. All these pieces
show an imitation of late Hellenistic art—not the best period of Greek
development. decorative paintings
THE VASES: The history of Greek painting in its remains is traced with
some accuracy in the decorative figures upon the vases. The first ware—dating
before the seventh centuryB.C.—seems free from oriental
influences in its designs. The vase is reddish, the decoration is in tiers,
bands, or zig-zags, usually in black or brown, without the human figure. The
second kind of ware dates from about the middle of the seventh century. It shows
meander, wave, and other designs, and is called the "geometrical" style. Later
on animals,art oil painting reproduction, rosettes, and vegetation appear that show Assyrian influence. The
decoration is profuse and the rude human figure subordinate to it. The design is
in black or dark-brown, on a cream-colored slip. The third kind of ware is the
archaic or "strong" style. It dates from 500 B.C. to
the Peloponnesian Wars, and is marked by black figures upon a yellow or red
ground. White and purple are also used to define flesh, hair, and white objects. The figure is stiff, the action awkward, the composition is freer than before,where to buy oil paintings, but still conventional. The subjects are the gods, demi-gods, and heroes in
scenes from their lives and adventures. The fourth kind of ware dates down into
the Hellenistic age and shows red figures surrounded by a black ground. The
figure, the drawing, the composition are better than at any other period and
suggest a high excellence in other forms of Greek painting. After Alexander,
vase painting seems to have shared the fate of wall and panel painting. There
was a striving for effect, with ornateness and extravagance, and finally the art
passed out entirely. oil paintings for sale cheap
There was an establishment founded in Southern Italy which imitated the Greek and produced the Apulian ware, but the Romans gave little encouragement to vase painting, and about 65 B.C. it disappeared. Almost all the museums of the world have collections of Greek vases. The British, Berlin, and Paris collections are perhaps as complete as any. landscape paintings for sale
There was an establishment founded in Southern Italy which imitated the Greek and produced the Apulian ware, but the Romans gave little encouragement to vase painting, and about 65 B.C. it disappeared. Almost all the museums of the world have collections of Greek vases. The British, Berlin, and Paris collections are perhaps as complete as any. landscape paintings for sale
SIKYONIAN SCHOOL-THEBAN-ATTIC SCHOOL(GREEK PAINTING)
SIKYONIAN SCHOOL: This school seems to have sprung up after the
Peloponnesian Wars, and was perhaps founded by Eupompos, a contemporary
of Parrhasios. His pupil Pamphilos brought the school to maturity. He
apparently reacted from the deception motive of Zeuxis and Parrhasios,oil paintings for sale, and
taught academic methods of drawing, composing, and painting. He was also
credited with bringing into use the encaustic method of painting, though it was
probably known before his time. His pupil, Pausias, possessed some
freedom of creation in genre and still-life subjects. Pliny says he had
great technical skill, as shown in the foreshortening of a black ox by
variations of the black tones, and he obtained some fame by a figure of Methè
(Intoxication) drinking from a glass, the face being seen through the glass. Again the motives
seem trifling, but again advancing technical power is shown. oil paintings for sale
THEBAN-ATTIC SCHOOL: This was the fourth school of Greek painting. Nikomachus (fl. about 360 B.C.), a facile painter, was at its head. His pupil, Aristides, painted pathetic scenes, and was perhaps as remarkable for teaching art to the celebrated Euphranor (fl. 360 B.C.) as for his own productions. Euphranor had great versatility in the arts, and in painting was renowned for his pictures of the Olympian gods at Athens. His successor, Nikias (fl. 340-300 B.C.), was a contemporary of Praxiteles, the sculptor, and was possibly influenced by him in the painting of female figures. He was a technician of ability in composition, light-and-shade, and relief, and was praised for the roundness of his figures. He also did some tinting of sculpture, and is said to have tinted some of the works of Praxiteles. reproduction oil paintings uk
LATE PAINTERS: Contemporary with and following these last-named artists were some celebrated painters who really belong to the beginning of the Hellenistic Period (323 B.C.). At their head was Apelles, the painter of Philip and Alexander, and the climax of Greek painting. He painted many gods, heroes, and allegories, with much "gracefulness," as Pliny puts it. The Italian Botticelli, seventeen hundred years after him,original oil paintings for sale, tried to reproduce his celebrated Calumny, from Lucian's description of it. His chief works were his Aphrodite Anadyomene, carried to Rome by Augustus, and the portrait of Alexander with the Thunder-bolt. He was undoubtedly a superior man technically.Protogenes rivalled him, if we are to believe Petronius, by the foam on a dog's mouth and the wonder in the eye of a startled pheasant.Aëtion, the painter of Alexander's Marriage to Roxana,large oil paintings on canvas, was not able to turn the aim of painting from this deceptive illusion. After Alexander, painting passed still further into the imitative and the theatrical, and when not grandiloquent was infinitely little over cobbler-shops and huckster-stalls. Landscape for purposes of decorative composition, and floor painting, done in mosaic, came in during the time of the Diadochi. There were no great names in the latter days, and such painters as still flourished passed on to Rome, there to produce copies of the works of their predecessors. hand painted oil paintings
It is hard to reconcile the unworthy motive attributed to Greek painting by the ancient writers with the high aim of Greek sculpture. It is easier to think (and it is more probable) that the writers knew very little about art, and that they missed the spirit of Greek painting in admiring its insignificant details. That painting technically was at a high point of perfection as regards the figure, even the imitative Roman works indicate, and it can hardly be doubted that in spirit it was at one time equally strong. oil paintings of flowers
THEBAN-ATTIC SCHOOL: This was the fourth school of Greek painting. Nikomachus (fl. about 360 B.C.), a facile painter, was at its head. His pupil, Aristides, painted pathetic scenes, and was perhaps as remarkable for teaching art to the celebrated Euphranor (fl. 360 B.C.) as for his own productions. Euphranor had great versatility in the arts, and in painting was renowned for his pictures of the Olympian gods at Athens. His successor, Nikias (fl. 340-300 B.C.), was a contemporary of Praxiteles, the sculptor, and was possibly influenced by him in the painting of female figures. He was a technician of ability in composition, light-and-shade, and relief, and was praised for the roundness of his figures. He also did some tinting of sculpture, and is said to have tinted some of the works of Praxiteles. reproduction oil paintings uk
LATE PAINTERS: Contemporary with and following these last-named artists were some celebrated painters who really belong to the beginning of the Hellenistic Period (323 B.C.). At their head was Apelles, the painter of Philip and Alexander, and the climax of Greek painting. He painted many gods, heroes, and allegories, with much "gracefulness," as Pliny puts it. The Italian Botticelli, seventeen hundred years after him,original oil paintings for sale, tried to reproduce his celebrated Calumny, from Lucian's description of it. His chief works were his Aphrodite Anadyomene, carried to Rome by Augustus, and the portrait of Alexander with the Thunder-bolt. He was undoubtedly a superior man technically.Protogenes rivalled him, if we are to believe Petronius, by the foam on a dog's mouth and the wonder in the eye of a startled pheasant.Aëtion, the painter of Alexander's Marriage to Roxana,large oil paintings on canvas, was not able to turn the aim of painting from this deceptive illusion. After Alexander, painting passed still further into the imitative and the theatrical, and when not grandiloquent was infinitely little over cobbler-shops and huckster-stalls. Landscape for purposes of decorative composition, and floor painting, done in mosaic, came in during the time of the Diadochi. There were no great names in the latter days, and such painters as still flourished passed on to Rome, there to produce copies of the works of their predecessors. hand painted oil paintings
It is hard to reconcile the unworthy motive attributed to Greek painting by the ancient writers with the high aim of Greek sculpture. It is easier to think (and it is more probable) that the writers knew very little about art, and that they missed the spirit of Greek painting in admiring its insignificant details. That painting technically was at a high point of perfection as regards the figure, even the imitative Roman works indicate, and it can hardly be doubted that in spirit it was at one time equally strong. oil paintings of flowers
Sunday, December 29, 2013
OLDER ATTIC SCHOOL-IONIAN SCHOOL(GREEK PAINTING)
OLDER ATTIC SCHOOL: The first painter of rank was Polygnotus
(fl. 475-455 B.C.), sometimes called the founder of
Greek painting, because perhaps he was one of the first important painters in
Greece proper. He seems to have been a good outline draughtsman, producing
figures in profile, with little attempt at relief, perspective, or
light-and-shade. His colors were local tones, but probably more like nature and
more varied than anything in Egyptian painting. Landscapes, buildings, and the
like,oil paintings for sale, were given in a symbolic manner. Portraiture was a generalization, and in
figure com positions the names of the principal characters were
written near them for purposes of identification. The most important works of
Polygnotus were the wall paintings for the Assembly Room of the Knidians at
Delphi. The subjects related to the Trojan War and the adventures of
Ulysses.
Opposed to this flat, unrelieved style was the work of a follower, Agatharchos of Samos (fl. end of fifth century B.C.). He was a scene-painter, and by the necessities of his craft was led toward nature. Stage effect required a study of perspective, variation of light,oil painting online, and a knowledge of the laws of optics. The slight outline drawing of his predecessor was probably superseded by effective masses to create illusion. This was a distinct advance toward nature.Apollodorus (fl. end of fifth century B.C.) applied the principles of Agatharchos to figures. According to Plutarch, he was the first to discover variation in the shade of colors, and, according to Pliny, the first master to paint objects as they appeared in nature. He had the title of skiagraphos (shadow-painter), and possibly gave a semi-natural background with perspective. This was an improvement, but not a perfection. It is not likely that the backgrounds were other than conventional settings for the figure. Even these were not at once accepted by the painters of the period, but were turned to profit in the hands of the followers. art oil paintings for sale
After the Peloponnesian Wars the art of painting seems to have flourished elsewhere than in Athens, owing to the Athenian loss of supremacy. Other schools sprang up in various districts, and one to call for considerable mention by the ancient writers was the
IONIAN SCHOOL, which in reality had existed from the sixth century. The painters of this school advanced upon the work of Apollodorus as regards realistic effect. Zeuxis, whose fame was at its height during the Peloponnesian Wars, seems to have regarded art as a matter of illusion,oil painting on canvas, if one may judge by the stories told of his work.The tale of his painting a bunch of grapes so like reality that the birds came to peck at them proves either that the painter's motive was deception, or that the narrator of the tale picked out the deceptive part of his picture for admiration. He painted many subjects, like Helen, Penelope, and many genre pieces on panel. Quintilian says he originated light-and-shade, an achievement credited by Plutarch to Apollodorus. It is probable that he advanced light-and-shade. modern abstract art oil painting
In illusion he seems to have been outdone by a rival, Parrhasios of Ephesus. Zeuxis deceived the birds with painted grapes, but Parrhasios deceived Zeuxis with a painted curtain. There must have been knowledge of color, modelling, and relief to have produced such an illusion, but the aim was petty and unworthy of the skill. There was evidently an advance technically, but some decline in the true spirit of art. Parrhasios finally suffered defeat at the hands of Timanthes of Kythnos, by a Contest between Ajax and Ulysses for the Arms of Achilles. Timanthes's famous work was the Sacrifice of Iphigenia, of which there is a supposed Pompeian copy. abstract oil painting
Opposed to this flat, unrelieved style was the work of a follower, Agatharchos of Samos (fl. end of fifth century B.C.). He was a scene-painter, and by the necessities of his craft was led toward nature. Stage effect required a study of perspective, variation of light,oil painting online, and a knowledge of the laws of optics. The slight outline drawing of his predecessor was probably superseded by effective masses to create illusion. This was a distinct advance toward nature.Apollodorus (fl. end of fifth century B.C.) applied the principles of Agatharchos to figures. According to Plutarch, he was the first to discover variation in the shade of colors, and, according to Pliny, the first master to paint objects as they appeared in nature. He had the title of skiagraphos (shadow-painter), and possibly gave a semi-natural background with perspective. This was an improvement, but not a perfection. It is not likely that the backgrounds were other than conventional settings for the figure. Even these were not at once accepted by the painters of the period, but were turned to profit in the hands of the followers. art oil paintings for sale
After the Peloponnesian Wars the art of painting seems to have flourished elsewhere than in Athens, owing to the Athenian loss of supremacy. Other schools sprang up in various districts, and one to call for considerable mention by the ancient writers was the
IONIAN SCHOOL, which in reality had existed from the sixth century. The painters of this school advanced upon the work of Apollodorus as regards realistic effect. Zeuxis, whose fame was at its height during the Peloponnesian Wars, seems to have regarded art as a matter of illusion,oil painting on canvas, if one may judge by the stories told of his work.The tale of his painting a bunch of grapes so like reality that the birds came to peck at them proves either that the painter's motive was deception, or that the narrator of the tale picked out the deceptive part of his picture for admiration. He painted many subjects, like Helen, Penelope, and many genre pieces on panel. Quintilian says he originated light-and-shade, an achievement credited by Plutarch to Apollodorus. It is probable that he advanced light-and-shade. modern abstract art oil painting
In illusion he seems to have been outdone by a rival, Parrhasios of Ephesus. Zeuxis deceived the birds with painted grapes, but Parrhasios deceived Zeuxis with a painted curtain. There must have been knowledge of color, modelling, and relief to have produced such an illusion, but the aim was petty and unworthy of the skill. There was evidently an advance technically, but some decline in the true spirit of art. Parrhasios finally suffered defeat at the hands of Timanthes of Kythnos, by a Contest between Ajax and Ulysses for the Arms of Achilles. Timanthes's famous work was the Sacrifice of Iphigenia, of which there is a supposed Pompeian copy. abstract oil painting
SUBJECTS AND METHODS(GREEK PAINTING)
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: The gods and heroes, their lives and adventures,
formed the early subjects of Greek painting.Certain themes taken from the "Iliad" and the
"Odyssey" were as frequently shown as, afterward, the Annunciations in Italian
painting. The traditional subjects, the Centaurs and Lapiths, the Amazon war,
Theseus and Ariadne, Perseus and Andromeda, were frequently depicted. Humanity
and actual Greek life came in for its share. Single figures, still-life,
genre, caricature, all were shown, and as painting neared the Alexandrian
age a semi-realistic portraiture came into vogue. oil paintings for sale
The materials employed by the Greeks and their methods of work are somewhat difficult to ascertain, because there are few Greek pictures, except those on the vases, left to us. From the confusing accounts of the ancient writers, the vases, some Greek slabs in Italy, and the Roman paintings imitative of the Greek, we may gain a general idea. The early Greek work was largely devoted to pottery and tomb decoration,cheap oil paintings, in which much in manner and method was borrowed from Asia, Phœnicia, and Egypt. Later on, painting appeared in flat outline on stone or terra-cotta slabs, sometimes representing processional scenes, as in Egypt, and doubtless done in a hybrid fresco-work similar to the Egyptian method. Wall paintings were done in fresco and distemper, probably upon the walls themselves, and also upon panels afterward let into the wall. Encaustic painting (color mixed with wax upon the panel and fused with a hot spatula) came in with the Sikyonian school. It is possible that the oil medium and canvas were known, but not probable that either was ever used extensively. art oil paintings
There is no doubt about the Greeks being expert draughtsmen, though this does not appear until late in history. They knew the outlines well, and drew them with force and grace. That they modelled in strong relief is more questionable. Light-and-shade was certainly employed in the figure, but not in any modern way. Perspective in both figures and landscape was used; but the landscape was at first symbolic and rarely got beyond a decorative background for the figure. Greek composition we know little about,art oil paintings for sale, but may infer that it was largely a series of balances, a symmetrical adjustment of objects to fill a given space with not very much freedom allowed to the artist. In atmosphere, sunlight, color, and those peculiarly sensuous charms that belong to painting, there is no reason to believe that the Greeks approached the moderns. Their interest was chiefly centred in the human figure. Landscape, with its many beauties, was reserved for modern hands to disclose. Color was used in abundance, without doubt, but it was probably limited to the leading hues, with little of that refinement or delicacy known in painting to-day. oil paintings online
ART HISTORY: For the history of Greek painting we have to rely upon the words of Aristotle, Plutarch, Pliny, Quintilian, Lucian, Cicero, Pausanias. Their accounts appear to be partly substantiated by the vase paintings, and such few slabs and Roman frescos as remain to us. There is no consecutive narrative. The story of painting originating from a girl seeing the wall-silhouette of her lover and filling it in with color, and the conjecture of painting having developed from embroidery work, have neither of them a foundation in fact. The earliest settlers of Greece probably learned painting from the Phœnicians, and employed it, after the Egyptian,reproduction oil paintings for sale, Assyrian, and Phœnician manner, on pottery, terra-cotta slabs, and rude sculpture. It developed slower than sculpture perhaps; but were there anything of importance left to judge from, we should probably find that it developed in much the same manner as sculpture. Down to 500B.C. there was little more than outline filled in with flat monochromatic paint and with a decorative effect similar, perhaps, to that of the vase paintings. After that date come the more important names of artists mentioned by the ancient writers. It is difficult to assign these artists to certain periods or schools, owing to the insufficient knowledge we have about them. The following classifications and assignments may, therefore, in some instances, be questioned. oil painting reproductions
The materials employed by the Greeks and their methods of work are somewhat difficult to ascertain, because there are few Greek pictures, except those on the vases, left to us. From the confusing accounts of the ancient writers, the vases, some Greek slabs in Italy, and the Roman paintings imitative of the Greek, we may gain a general idea. The early Greek work was largely devoted to pottery and tomb decoration,cheap oil paintings, in which much in manner and method was borrowed from Asia, Phœnicia, and Egypt. Later on, painting appeared in flat outline on stone or terra-cotta slabs, sometimes representing processional scenes, as in Egypt, and doubtless done in a hybrid fresco-work similar to the Egyptian method. Wall paintings were done in fresco and distemper, probably upon the walls themselves, and also upon panels afterward let into the wall. Encaustic painting (color mixed with wax upon the panel and fused with a hot spatula) came in with the Sikyonian school. It is possible that the oil medium and canvas were known, but not probable that either was ever used extensively. art oil paintings
There is no doubt about the Greeks being expert draughtsmen, though this does not appear until late in history. They knew the outlines well, and drew them with force and grace. That they modelled in strong relief is more questionable. Light-and-shade was certainly employed in the figure, but not in any modern way. Perspective in both figures and landscape was used; but the landscape was at first symbolic and rarely got beyond a decorative background for the figure. Greek composition we know little about,art oil paintings for sale, but may infer that it was largely a series of balances, a symmetrical adjustment of objects to fill a given space with not very much freedom allowed to the artist. In atmosphere, sunlight, color, and those peculiarly sensuous charms that belong to painting, there is no reason to believe that the Greeks approached the moderns. Their interest was chiefly centred in the human figure. Landscape, with its many beauties, was reserved for modern hands to disclose. Color was used in abundance, without doubt, but it was probably limited to the leading hues, with little of that refinement or delicacy known in painting to-day. oil paintings online
ART HISTORY: For the history of Greek painting we have to rely upon the words of Aristotle, Plutarch, Pliny, Quintilian, Lucian, Cicero, Pausanias. Their accounts appear to be partly substantiated by the vase paintings, and such few slabs and Roman frescos as remain to us. There is no consecutive narrative. The story of painting originating from a girl seeing the wall-silhouette of her lover and filling it in with color, and the conjecture of painting having developed from embroidery work, have neither of them a foundation in fact. The earliest settlers of Greece probably learned painting from the Phœnicians, and employed it, after the Egyptian,reproduction oil paintings for sale, Assyrian, and Phœnician manner, on pottery, terra-cotta slabs, and rude sculpture. It developed slower than sculpture perhaps; but were there anything of importance left to judge from, we should probably find that it developed in much the same manner as sculpture. Down to 500B.C. there was little more than outline filled in with flat monochromatic paint and with a decorative effect similar, perhaps, to that of the vase paintings. After that date come the more important names of artists mentioned by the ancient writers. It is difficult to assign these artists to certain periods or schools, owing to the insufficient knowledge we have about them. The following classifications and assignments may, therefore, in some instances, be questioned. oil painting reproductions
Saturday, December 28, 2013
GREECE AND THE GREEKS(EGYPTIAN PAINTING)
Books Recommended: Baumeister, Denkmäler des
klassischen Altertums—article "Malerei;" Birch, History of Ancient
Pottery; Brunn, Geschichte der griechischen Künstler; Collignon,
Mythologie figurée de la Grèce; Collignon,Manuel d'Archaeologie
Grecque; Cros et Henry,L'Encaustique et les autres procédés de Peinture
chez les Anciens; Girard, La Peinture Antique; Murray, Handbook of
Greek Archæology; Overbeck, Antiken Schriftquellen zur geschichte der
bildenen Kunste bie den Griechen; Perrot and Chipiez, History of Art in
Greece; Woerman, Die Landschaft in der Kunst der antiken Volker;
see also books on Etruscan and Roman painting. oil paintings for sale
GREECE AND THE GREEKS: The origin of the Greek race is not positively
known. It is reasonably supposed that the early settlers in Greece came from the
region of Asia Minor, either across the Hellespont or the sea, and populated the
Greek islands and the mainland. When this was done has been matter of much
conjecture. The early history is lost, but art remains show that in the period
before Homer the Greeks were an established race with habits and customs
distinctly individual. Egyptian and Asiatic influences are apparent in their art
at this early time, but there is, nevertheless, the mark of a race peculiarly
apart from all the races of the older world. original oil paintingsThe development of the Greek people was probably helped by favorable climate and soil, by commerce and conquest, by republican institutions and political faith, by freedom of mind and of body; but all these together are not sufficient to account for the keenness of intellect, the purity of taste, and the skill in accomplishment which showed in every branch of Greek life. The cause lies deeper in the fundamental make-up of the Greek mind,oil painting reproductions, and its eternal aspiration toward mental, moral, and physical ideals. Perfect mind, perfect body, perfect conduct in this world were sought-for ideals. The Greeks aspired to completeness. The course of education and race development trained them physically as athletes and warriors, mentally as philosophers, law-makers, poets, artists, morally as heroes whose lives and actions emulated those of the gods, and were almost perfect for this world. abstract oil paintings on canvas
ART MOTIVES: Neither the monarchy nor the priesthood commanded the services of the artist in Greece, as in Assyria and Egypt. There was no monarch in an oriental sense, and the chosen leaders of the Greeks never, until the late days, arrogated art to themselves. It was something for all the people. buy oil paintings online
In religion there was a pantheon of gods established and worshipped from the earliest ages, but these gods were more like epitomes of Greek ideals than spiritual beings. They were the personified virtues of the Greeks, exemplars of perfect living; and in worshipping them the Greek was really worshipping order, conduct, repose, dignity, perfect life. The gods and heroes, as types of moral and physical qualities, were continually represented in an allegorical or legendary manner. Athene represented noble warfare,abstract art oil paintings, Zeus was majestic dignity and power, Aphrodite love, Phœbus song, Niké triumph, and all the lesser gods, nymphs, and fauns stood for beauties of nature or of life. The great bulk of Greek architecture, sculpture, and painting was put forth to honor these gods or heroes, and by so doing the artist repeated the national ideals and honored himself. The first motive of Greek art, then, was to praise Hellas and the Hellenic view of life. In part it was a religious motive, but with little of that spiritual significance and belief which ruled in Egypt, and later on in Italy. still life oil paintings
A second and ever-present motive in Greek painting was decoration. This appears in the tomb pottery of the earliest ages, and was carried on down to the latest times. Vase painting, wall painting, tablet and sculpture painting were all done with a decorative motive in view. Even the easel or panel pictures had some decorative effect about them, though they were primarily intended to convey ideas other than those of form and color. wholesale oil paintings
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