Editor's note: This scholarly overview is offered to assist readers on museum sojourns and as an introduction to further, personal inquiry into this seminal period of the history of sculpture.
Greek sculpture owes its development and its excellence to the strong traditions established by the early sculptors of the Archaic period. Each generation added to the general growth of knowledge, skills and techniques. Greek sculptors, through their art and by teaching relatives and pupils, would influence a larger group of artists.
Although styles and innovations changed, the traditions that were established would continue from generation to generation. Periodic revivals would occur, where artists would return to the fountainhead of the 5th-4th Century.
Sculptors:
Ageladas
of
Argos —
Late Archaic Phase, 510-480 BC.
Myron of
Eleutherai —
Early Classical Period, 480-450 BC.
Pheidias
of
Athens —
High Classical Period, 450-400 BC.
PolyKleitos of
Argos —
High Classical Period, 450-400 BC.
Praxiteles of
Athens —
Fourth Century, 370-330 BC.
Skopas of
Paros —
Fourth Century, 353 BC.
Lysippos
of Sikyon —
Fourth Century, 370-305 BC.
School of Lysippos —
Early Hellenistic Phase, 296 BC.
School of Pergamon —
Middle Hellenistic Phase, 250-150 BC.
School of Rhodes —
Classicism and later Hellenistic, 175-31 BC.
Neo
Attic Sculptors
Sculptors of the Late
Archaic Period —
510-480 BC.
Agelados
of
Argos
We have
no record of the quality of his work. It is known that he
did a variety of statues of Athletes and Gods. His fame
seems to rest largely in that he was the teacher of three
great sculptors of the Classical Period: Myron, Pheidias and
Polykleitor.
Myron of
Eleutherai
...was
renowned for his discus thrower and his famous statue of a
heifer. His work moved toward realism but with strong
emphasis on composition and design. His work had a flow and
rhythm with a good deal of action.
High
Classical Period —
450-400 BC.
Pheidias
of
Athens
...was a
general supervisor of the Art Activities in Athens at the
time of Pericles. The Parthenon, with its cult statue in
gold and ivory of Athena, a colossus 42 feet in height, were
his main activities. Sometime later he was to create his
most famous statue of Zeus at Olympia.
His work was supreme and majestic. Pheidias's creations came
from his idealism and imagination (phantasia). His brother,
Panainos the painter, would aid him in various projects.
Pheidias also had three outstanding disciples who served him
well: Alkamenes, Agorakritos and Koletes. Kresilas (from
Crete), Pheidias' contemporary, created the portrait of
Pericles.
PolyKleitos of
Argos
...was
also of the High Classical Period. His most noted works were
of young male Athletes. The Doryphoros (spear-bearer), a
statue of a virile youth, was perhaps the basis of his Canon
(treatise). This had to do with commensurate proportions,
all interrelated by measure to create the perfect male
figure. Polykeitos made many statues of victorious Athletes.
He also created a gold and ivory statue of Hera. In his
later works, the male youth became somewhat softer and more
slender. Polykleitos's nephews, Naukydes, Daidalos, and
Polykleitos the younger, were distinguished sculptors.
Polykeitos also had many disciples.
Fourth
Century —
370-330 BC.
Praxiteles of
Athens
...was
the son of the sculptor Kephisodotos, who created the Eirene
and Ploutos. Praxiteles worked in bronze and marble. His
forms were very soft (Sfumato) and sensuous in treatment.
The marble of Aphrodite of Knidos was highly valued. Phryne,
his mistress, served as his model for this statue and a
number of other works. The Hermes carrying the infant
Dionysos, which is in Olympia, gives a good account of his
style. By Praxiteles's own judgment, his Eros and Satyr were
his favorite works of art. Praxiteles moved closer to
realism with a more subjective point of view. He created
statues of many gods and goddesses. Praxiteles's sons,
Kephisodotos II and Timarchos, are best known for their
portrait sculpture. He also had many disciples.
Skopas of
Paros
...was a
son of the sculptor Aristandros, who was a disciple of
Polykeitos. Skopas was both architect and major sculptor.
His fame rivaled that of Praxiteles. Skopas was one of the
five sculptors who worked on the Mausoleum at Halikarnassos;
the other sculptors were Bryaxis, Temotheos, Leochares and
Pythis. Their combined efforts were extraordinary, which
resulted in the Mausoleum being included as one of the Seven
Wonders of the World. Skopas made an Aphrodite, a Pothos (yearning), an Apollo,
and a seated Hestia. Skopas created a colossal seated Ares;
he also designed the
temple of
Athena Alea
in Tegea with its pediment sculptures, a statue of Asklepios
and Hygieia carved in pentelic marbles.
Lysippos
of Sikyon
...was
the court sculptor of Philip II and Alexander the Great. As
a younger contemporary of Praxiteles and Skopas, he was one
of the creators of the Hellenistic period of Art.
Lysippos believed that nature , not another artists' work, was his model. On one hand he was a naturist, and on the other, he was devoted to the idea of a Canon of proportions by Polykleitos. Lysippos gave his figures smaller heads and more slender bodies, giving greater height and elegance to his work, The head became 1\8 of the total height of the figure, where it had been 1\7. The bodies were more tightly knit. He observed the tradition of symmetria with great care. Of his classical phase, the statue of the Apoxyomenos (scraper) and his Eros are fine examples. Lysippos had a strong sense of tradition, but he was also an innovator. He manipulated scale for its effects and also brought back colossal scale in sculpture. Two of his known sculptures were Herakles and Zeus at Tarentum. Other works were Herakles (Farnese type) and Herakles, Epitrapezios (table). He made portrait sculpture more personalized without sacrificing character. Just a few examples are the portraits of Alexander the Great, Aristotle, and Socrates. Lysippos had a fondness for allegory, symbolism and personification, as shown in his Kairos (opportunity). This sculpture of Kairos expresses Lysippos's personal credo: His art dealt with temporal and ephemeral (things as they appear) whereas his predecessors dealt with timeless essence (things as they are). Lysippos's brother, Lysistratos, was the first to take a body cast from man. Lysippos's sons, Euthykrates, Boedos, and Daippos, were his pupils. He has a strong following of disciples including Teisikrates and Phonin. Xenocrates, the writer, was a student of his son Euthykrates. Eutychides created the statue of Tyche (fortune). Chares of Lindos made the Colossus of Rhodes. Diodalsas of Bithymia made a crouching Aphrodite.
Middle
Hellenistic Period —
250-150 BC.
The
Pergamou
School
Attalos
was the ruler who commissioned three major groups of
sculpture to commemorate the defeat of the invading Gauls.
The first group was of a dying Gaul and his wife. The second
group represented Persians, Amazons and Gauls. The last was
of a dying trumpeter. The sculptors were Stratonikos,
Phyromachos, Epigonos and Antigons, who wrote volumes about
his work. Epigonos, was the most celebrated; he has been
credited with sculpting the dying trumpeter (dying Gaul).
During the rule of Eumenos II (197-159 BC), the Great Altar
of Zeus was created by about forty sculptors. Fifteen who
worked on this remarkable project have been identified. The
most significant sculptors were Therrhetos, Menekrates,
Nikeratos, and Pythokritos. Phythokritos also created the
famous Nike of Samothace.
Two groups of statues, the Laocöön and the Sperlonga Shipwreck, were made by Hagesandros, Athenodoros and Polydoros. Another group, the "Farnese Bull" depicting Zethon, Amphion, and Dirke, was made by the brothers, Apollonios and Tauriskos of Tralles. Another sculptor of this period was Boethos, who made children well; one of his better known works is the boy strangling a goose.
The
Rise of Classicism and
the late Hellenistic Period —
175-31 BC.
Damophon of Messene made a cult group (the original still exists in fragments) of statues for the sanctuary of Despoina at Lykosoura; this sculptor is also credited for repairs made on the famous gold and ivory cult statue of Zeus by Pheidias. Pasiteles from southern Italy was a writer, silversmith and sculptor. He was part of the Neo Attic group of sculptors. The going rage among Roman collectors of art was seeking the old masters, Pheidias and Polkleitos. Workshops in Italy created new works in the old style of the 5th Century. Eukleides created a colossal head of Zeus. Aigeira, Polykles, Timokles, Timarchides and Dionysos were sculptors related to each other: father, sons and grandson.
Overview:
Myron - softened hard, early forms
PolyKeitos - perfected the male form
Pheidias - represents the supreme achievement of Greek Art
Praxiteles - mastered realism
Lysippos - mastered realism
Epigonos - known for stylistic devices — Hellenitstic baroque
Demetrios - blamed for carrying realism too far. Founder of a style based on similitude rather than beauty.
Pheidias, Praxiteles and Skopas were sculptors of Gods
Myron, Lysippos, and Poly Kleitos were sculptors of Men
The activities of Praxiteles, Skopas and Euphranor would end by the 330 BC. Leochares was mid-life, but Lysippos, still a young man, was the last great master of the 4th century.
Lysippos, through his follower, Hagesandros Athenodoros and Polydoros (who created the Laocöön) and Apollonios of Athens (creator of the Belvedere torso) directly influenced Michealangelo, as he acknowledged in his own writing.
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