Term
Cave Painting at Lascaux
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Hall of Bulls |
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Definition
Lascaux Cave. Dordogne, France. c. 15,000-10,000 BC
Paleolithic |
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Term
Cave Painting at Lascaux
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Bird-Headed Man With Bison |
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Definition
Shaft Scene in Lascaux Cave. c. 15,000-10,000 BC
Paleolithic
Only painting in the cave that seems to tell a story
Stylistically different from the other paintings
May be an illustration of a myth, record of an actual event, or depicting a vision of a shaman |
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Term
Prehistoric Sculpture
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Woman of Willendorf |
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Definition
- Statuette made from a large pebble, c. 25,000 BC
- Paleolithic
- Navel is a natural indentation of the stone
- May have been an expression of health and fertility, which ensures reproduction of strong children for the survival of the group
- One theory is that it is a self portrait made by a pregnant woman looking down at her body
- Another theory is that groups of hunters exchanged these statues to signal friendliness, or mating
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Term
Prehistoric Scupture
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Figure With a Lion Head |
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Definition
- Mammoth tusk ivory c. 30,000 BC
- Paleolithic
- Interesting because carver made a unique creature that is part-human part-beast instead of copying nature
- Could be a person wearing a ritual lion mask or a person taking on the appearance of an animal
- People at the time may have thought that humans and animals were part of one group that shared the earth
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Term
Prehistoric Sculpture
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Woman of Laussel |
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Definition
- Relief, c. 20,000-15,000 BC
- Paleolithic
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Term
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Definition
- Megalithic monument c. 2500 BC (neolithic)
- Went through 8 phases of construction over a millenium and a half
- Circle of bluestone (which had to be imported over 150 miles) and sarsen stone
- Functioned as a place of the dead
- Use of mortise-and-tenon joints
- Believed to be a ceremonial site for burials
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Term
Palette of Narmer
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Definition
- Pre-dynastic, c. 3100 BC
- Represents the beginning of Egypt's growth and the unification of Egypt
- Employs conventions that would continue in royal Egyptian art from this point on
- Message of the palette: Narmer, as ruler of Upper Egypt, is in firm control of Lower Egypt
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Term
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Definition
Pose where each part of the body is portrayed from its most characteristic viewpoint. Used when depicting royalty and other dignitaries. Head, hips, legs and feet shown in profile; eyes and torso shown fully frontal |
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Term
Portrait of Hesy-ra from Saqquara
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Definition
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Term
Great Sphinx at Giza
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Definition
- Old Kingdom, c. 2500 BC
- Funerary complex of Khafre
- Colossal portrait of the king with the body of a crouching lion, which suggests merging of human intelligence with animal strength
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Term
Three Great Pyramids at Giza
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Definition
- 4th dynasty c. 2500 BC
- Erected by (from the left) Menkaure, Khafre, and Khufu
- The oldest and largest is the Pyramid of Khufu
- Khafre's is slightly smaller and Menkaure's is the smallest
- Site was planned to follow the sun's east-west path
- Each pyramid is connected to a funerary temple where the dead kings lie.
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Term
Seated "Ka" statue of Khafre
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Definition
- Old kingdom, c. 2500 BC
- Exudes a strong sense of calm, dignity and permanence.
- When stone is illuminated by sunlight, it glows a deep blue, the celestial color of Horus
- Khafre wears the traditonal royal costume
- Symbolizes the king's power over Upper and Lower Egypt
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Term
Standing "Ka" double portrait of Menkaure and his Queen
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Definition
- Old Kingdom, c. 2500 BC
- Menkaure is Khafre's heir and the queen next to him is probably Khamerernebty II
- The couple's figures are close in size and are engaged in the stone, forming a single unit
- The Queen's symbolic gesture of an embrace further unites them
- Menkaure is depicted in accordance with Egyptian ideals, standing in a conventional pose
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Term
Temple Complex of Queen Hatshepsut at Deir-el-Bahri
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Definition
- New Kingdom, c. 1460 BC
- Pharoah Hatshepsut was one of few women who ruled Egypt
- Funerary temple reflects the natual three-part layering in the rise of the landscape-from flat desert, through a sloping hillside, to stone cliffs.
- The temple was constructed on an axial plane
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Term
Portrait Head of Queen Tiy
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Definition
- New Kingdom, c. 1380 BC 18th dynasty
- Tiy was the chief wife of Amenhotep III and mother of Akhenaten
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Term
Sunken Relief of Akhenaten and his Family Seated
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Definition
- New Kingdom, c. 1355 BC
- Amarna style relief sculpture
- Rather than composed serenity, this artist has conveyed the fidgety behavior of children and the loving involvement of their parents in a manner not even hinted at in earlier royal portraiture
- The sun disc represents Aten giving blessings, whose rays end in hands that offer ankhs before their nostrils, giving them the "breath of life"
- The daughters' elongated shaved heads conform to the newly minted figure type
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Term
Sunken Relief of Akhenaten and his family worshipping the Aten
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Definition
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Term
Portrait Head of Queen Nefertiti
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Definition
- New Kingdom, c. 1350 BC
- Proportions too ideal to be human
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Term
Painted Papyrus page from the Book of the Dead for Hunefer
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Definition
- New Kingdom, c. 1285 BC
- Scrolls commissioned by family members containing magical texts or spells to place among the wrappings of the mummified bodies
- Depicts a last judgement consisting of two tests given by Osiris. First they are questioned about their behavior in life, then there hearts are weighed on a scale against an ostrich feather
- If they past the test, they are accepted into the underworld; if they do not pass, they are eaten by Ammit, the "Eater of the Dead"
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Term
Coffin Cover and Golden Mask of Tutankhamen
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Definition
- New Kingdom, 18th dynasty c. 1350 BC
- Sarcophagus of King Tutankhamun, the son of Akhenaten who returned to traditional religious beliefs and moved his court back to Thebes. He died young
- The features on the coffin and mask suggest the continuing vitality of some Amarna stylizations
- Coffins and the mask were gold inlaid with glass and semiprecious stones
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Term
Temple Complex of Ramses II at Abu Simbel
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Definition
- New Kingdom, 19th dynasty c. 1280 BC
- Not a funerary temple
- The monuments are carved directly into the living rock of the sacred hills
- A second temple is carved into natural rock dedicated to his principal wife Nefertari and Hathor
- Ramses II was a king-god of Egypt, ruler of a vast empire,a virile wonder who fathered nearly one hundred children
- The larger temple is dedicated to Ramses and the Egyptian gods Amun, Ra-Horakhty and Ptah
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Term
Votive Figures from Ur
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Definition
- Mesopotamian, c. 2700-2500 BC
- Sumerian religious art
- Images dedicated to the Gods
- Individuals would set up figures of themselves in a shrine before a larger, more elaborate image of a god
- Served as a stand-in for the donor with locked in eye-contact with the god, caught perpetually in the act of worship
- Sculptors followed important conventions in Sumerian art
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Term
Bull Lyre from a Sumerian Royal Tomb
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Definition
- Mesopotamian (Ancient Near Eastern) c. 2500 BC
- Harp-like instrument with shell inlay and gold. Rested over the body of the woman who played it during the funeral for the royal figure buried nearby
- Panel has an illustration of 4 scenes
- Top register is of the hero strangling bulls, which suggests the rejection of the mother goddess for male sky gods
- Other 3 scenes of animals personifying activities of humans
- The scenes in the panels are related to the Epic of Gilgamesh, Sumer's greatest contribution to world literature.
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Term
Victory Stele of Naram-Sin
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Definition
- c. 2300-2200
- The concept of imperial authority
- Memorializes one of Naram-Sin's military victories, and is one of the first works of art that celebrates a specific achievement of an individual ruler
- Naram-Sin is hieratically scaled and wears a horned helmet-crown associated only with gods, speaking to his religious and political authority as leader of the states
- In ancient Mesopotamian culture, male potency and vigor were directly related to political power and dominance
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Term
Hittite Lion Gate from Hattushash, Anatolia
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Definition
- c. 1400 BC
- Megalithic
- The apotropaic guardian lions possess a sense of both vigor and permanence
- The Hittites are noted for their imposing palace citadels with double walls and fortified gateways
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Term
Lamassus from the palace of Assurbanipal II
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Definition
- 9th century BC
- A Lamassus is an apotropaic guardian meant to intimidate and instill awe
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Term
Lamassus from the Citadel Gate of Sargon II
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Definition
- 8th century BC
- Sargon's palace demonstrates the use of art as political propaganda
- Apotropaic guardians at the gates that one must pass through to enter the royal throne room
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