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Early Cycladic Art and Culture
The Cyclades, a group of islands in the southwestern Aegean, comprises some thirty small islands and numerous islets. The ancient Greeks called them kyklades, imagining them as a circle ( kyklos ) around the sacred island of Delos, the site of the holiest sanctuary to Apollo. Many of the Cycladic Islands are particularly rich in mineral resources—iron ores, copper, lead ores, gold, silver, emery, obsidian, and marble, the marble of Paros and Naxos among the finest in the world. Archaeological evidence points to sporadic Neolithic settlements on Antiparos, Melos, Mykonos, Naxos, and other Cycladic Islands at least as early as the sixth millennium B.C. These earliest settlers probably cultivated barley and wheat, and most likely fished the Aegean for tunny and other fish. They were also accomplished sculptors in stone, as attested by significant finds of marble figurines on Saliagos (near Paros and Antiparos). In the third millennium B.C., a distinctive civilization, commonly called the Early Cycladic culture (ca. 3200–2300 B.C. ), emerged with important settlement sites on Keros and at Halandriani on Syros. At this time in the Early Bronze Age, metallurgy developed at a fast pace in the Mediterranean. It was especially fortuitous for the Early Cycladic culture that their islands were rich in iron ores and copper, and that they offered a favorable route across the Aegean. In
Early Cycladic Art and Culture | Thematic Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art island of copper greek gods and religious practices greek terracotta figurines with articulated limbs list of rulers of the ancient greek world music in ancient greece tanagra figurines the technique of bronze statuary in ancient greece ... maps (2)... europe, 8000–2000 b.c. world, 8000–2000 b.c. ... index terms (14)... art movement/style... cycladic art minoan art mycaenean art artist... bastis master (greek, active mid 3rd millennium) material and technique... ceramic from the balkan peninsula marble sculpture in the round sculpture in the round from the balkan peninsula object... http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/ecyc/hd_ecyc.htm [951 words]
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greek and roman art (
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roman republic (
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egyptian art (
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alexander the great (
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henri matisse (
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hellenistic period (
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cubism (
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Marble female figure ¦ Bastis Master ¦ Highlights ¦ Greek and Roman Art ¦ Collection Database ¦ Works of Art ¦ The Metro marble female figure medium; technique marble culture cycladic period early cycladic ii date ca. 2600–2400 b.c. artist or maker attributed to the bastis master dimensions h. 24 3/4 in. (62.79 cm) classification stone sculpture credit line gift of christos g. bastis, 1968 accession number 68.148 on view: gallery 151 description provenance selected bibliography description namepiece of the bastis master. http://www.metmuseum.org/works_of_art/collection_database/all/marble_female_figure_bastis_master/objectview.aspx?page=1& [447 words]
Standing female figure [Cycladic; Keros-Syros culture] (68.148) ¦ Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History ¦ The Metropolitan M suggesting the surface of the sculpture is at least as important as the sculpted form. the recognition of distinct artistic personalities in cycladic sculpture is based upon recurring systems of proportion and details of execution. this standing female figure is the name piece of the bastis master, known for a stylization of the human body that is elegant almost to the point of mannerism. the curved surfaces of the head, the restrained swelling of the breasts and abdomen, and the downward pointing toes with slightly convex soles represent exceptional technical command. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/68.148 [258 words]
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