Aegean Civilization .
Publié le 03/05/2013
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warlike.
The styles are also more formal and geometric than those of earlier examples, anticipating the art of classical Greece.
A typical Mycenaean city had, at its center, the fortress palace of the king.
The cities were fortified with massive structures of unevenly cut stones, known as Cyclopeanwalls.
The Linear B tablets from this time include names of Greek gods, such as Zeus, and contain detailed records of royal possessions.
The gold masks, weapons, andjewelry found by Schliemann at the royal burial sites suggest the great wealth and power gained by the Mycenaeans when they took over the Minoan trading empire.Troy, which is believed to have been situated on the mainland of Asia Minor (now Turkey) near the Hellespont, was in a good position to harass shipping and collectexorbitant tolls from the Mycenaeans.
Archaeological evidence indicates that a city on this site was destroyed about 1200 BC, close to the date (1184 BC) accepted by the ancient Greeks.
Shortly after 1200 BC the Aegean civilization collapsed, a fact that was attributed by some scholars to natural disasters, or, most likely, to widespread fighting among the Mycenaean Greeks.
A period generally described as the Dark Age followed.
V AEGEAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE
Aegean art is remarkable for its naturalistic pictorial style, originated in Minoan Crete; the movement and variety of Minoan art, even in its earlier abstract phases,suggest living things.
From Crete, this style spread to the other Aegean islands and the Greek mainland, where it was modified by geometric tendencies.
The rhythmicpulse that characterizes Aegean art suggests a deep reverence for the divinities of nature.
A Architecture
The organic quality of Minoan style is seen most clearly in the palaces of Crete.
The four major palaces known—at Knossos, Phaestos, Mallia, and Zakros—followed thesame basic plan.
Rooms, on several levels, were functionally organized around a large central court.
These courts must have accommodated crowds of worshipers, whogathered in front of the cult rooms to the west.
The palaces also had extensive basement storage areas, artists’ workshops, dining halls, and sumptuous living quarters(including bathrooms) for the noble ruling families.
The structures were light and flexible, rather than monumental, and entirely unfortified.
The distinctive Minoancolumn, with its downward taper, suggests movement rather than stability.
Another specifically Minoan feature was the polythyron, a wall made of doors, which allowedfor flexibility in ventilating or closing off a room.
The private habitations of Minoan Crete ranged from simple peasant dwellings to rich mansions and villas, constructed with the same features and fine techniques as thepalaces.
A wide variety of buildings were constructed for burials.
The most distinctive were the tholos tombs of southern Crete, circular buildings with corbelled stonevaulting, built large enough to accommodate family burials for many centuries.
On the Greek mainland, the palaces of the rulers were completely different from those of Crete.
They incorporated the characteristic megaron, a dominant central hall.The megara of the best-known palaces—at Mycenae, Tiryns, and Pylos—were strikingly similar.
Each was entered from a courtyard through a porch flanked by columnsand had a large central hearth surrounded by four columns.
The mainland sites tended to be fortified with huge walls of cyclopean masonry, constructed of massive,irregular blocks.
Recent excavations at Mycenae indicate that, as in Crete, the palaces served as centers of worship as well as of government.
For royal burials theMycenaean Greeks first used shaft graves; later they adopted the Minoan tholos tomb and developed it into an impressive burial structure.
The tombs were coveredwith earth tumuli, or artificial mounds, and were entered through long passageways.
In the most developed tombs, such as the so-called Treasury of Atreus atMycenae, the large, circular spaces were dramatically vaulted with thick canopies of stone.
B Painting and Sculpture
Minoan painting is found in two forms, the vivid frescoes on the palace walls and the graceful designs that decorate Minoan pottery.
Surviving Minoan sculpture, with afew exceptions, is largely restricted to statuettes and figurines in various materials and to intaglio-cut semiprecious stone seals.
B1 Frescoes
In Crete the palaces and houses were often decorated with bright murals.
The Minoans made a major contribution to the art of landscape painting.
Only in the Aegeanwere landscapes depicted for their own sake, without human figures.
Minoan artists represented the terrain with undulating contours and swirling striations of color toemphasize the life of the earth.
The scenes were enlivened with animals, such as monkeys and birds, in sprightly movement amid swaying foliage.
The Minoans had aspecial facility among ancient peoples for capturing motion.
Figures were depicted in instantaneous moments of action and in a great variety of poses.
Minoan figuresare usually slender, which enhances their look of mobility.
It is primarily in ritual scenes, such as the bull-leaping fresco from the palace at Knossos, that human figuresare depicted.
Occasionally, frescoes were rendered in a special shorthand method of painting known as the miniature style, whereby crowds of people were depicted ina small area with a few light sketchy strokes.
Recently excavated on Thíra, in the Cyclades, well-preserved frescoes from prosperous private homes show a close relationship to the art of Crete, although the naturescenes are rendered more abstractly.
Many of the Thíra frescoes feature children, who are portrayed at different ages and with their heads shaved, except for specifichairlocks.
One especially important painting, from a site known as the West House, presents a narrative scene in an elaborate setting, the most extensive landscapeknown before the Hellenistic period.
An entire Aegean world is depicted, with a fleet of lavishly ornamented ships sailing from town to town.
Despite the remarkableachievement of the painting, the artist clearly had no notion of perspective.
The Minoan pictorial repertoire and fresco technique were later adopted on the Greek mainland, where religious scenes similar to those from Crete and Thíra weredepicted.
Hunting and fighting scenes were also popular.
Recent excavations at Tall al Daba in the western delta of Egypt have uncovered fragments of frescoes, themotifs of which include bull-jumping scenes and the like painted with Minoan, not Egyptian, colors.
The relationships between Egyptian and Minoan painting must now beinvestigated anew.
B2 Sculpture
Among the earliest examples of sculpture from the Aegean are those from the Cyclades in the form of schematic idols recalling the contours of violins.
From thesebeginnings evolved life-sized, brightly painted marble figures, generally of women with their arms folded beneath their breasts, and an astonishing array of seated malefigures generally playing harps or holding drinking cups in their hands.
Unique among the artifacts of the Aegean civilization are the bronze figurines associated exclusively with Minoan sites.
These metal sculptures include male and femaleworshipers with their arms raise in adoration as well as an image of a crawling infant, a bull with its jumper, and a reclining goat.
The Minoan artists excelled in thecarving of ivory figurines to which secondary materials were added to enhance their effect.
To the goddesses associated with animals can now be added anextraordinary image of a youthful god, the body of which is sculpted in ivory covered with gold leaf and the head of which is carved from a single piece of blue-gray.
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