The Sculptures of the ParthenonJ. Murray, 1903 - 173 pages |
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Page 13
... interested in the result . Next , in order of time , came the Parthenon pediments . There also we find the new principle of composition - a great central group flanked on each side by secondary beings . But there is this momentous ...
... interested in the result . Next , in order of time , came the Parthenon pediments . There also we find the new principle of composition - a great central group flanked on each side by secondary beings . But there is this momentous ...
Page 15
... interested spectators . That , as we have already remarked , was a striking advance on the older methods of composition . It introduced a new touch of nature , which must have appealed to the poetic instincts of a great sculptor coming ...
... interested spectators . That , as we have already remarked , was a striking advance on the older methods of composition . It introduced a new touch of nature , which must have appealed to the poetic instincts of a great sculptor coming ...
Page 20
... interested spectators in the form of local heroes or local personifications , were not necessarily there also . To assume that they were present on the Acropolis seems a far too narrow and literal inter- pretation of a divine incident ...
... interested spectators in the form of local heroes or local personifications , were not necessarily there also . To assume that they were present on the Acropolis seems a far too narrow and literal inter- pretation of a divine incident ...
Page 28
... invisible , but the shock of their contention reached by some divine sound or sight the beings in Attica who were at the moment most interested in the result . CHAPTER III THE EAST PEDIMENT [ PLATES VI.-IX. ] N 28 THE WEST PEDIMENT.
... invisible , but the shock of their contention reached by some divine sound or sight the beings in Attica who were at the moment most interested in the result . CHAPTER III THE EAST PEDIMENT [ PLATES VI.-IX. ] N 28 THE WEST PEDIMENT.
Page 30
... the west ; that is to say , a great central group of deities who were visible only to the inner eye , and two angle groups of secondary beings , whom for the moment we may call merely interested spectators . 30 THE EAST PEDIMENT.
... the west ; that is to say , a great central group of deities who were visible only to the inner eye , and two angle groups of secondary beings , whom for the moment we may call merely interested spectators . 30 THE EAST PEDIMENT.
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Common terms and phrases
Acropolis Acropolis of Athens action Alcamenes angle Aphroditè apobates appear artistic Athenè Athenians attitude beauty birth of Athenè body British Museum Carrey's drawing carry cast Cecrops Centaur Centaurs and Lapiths central group central metopes centre chariot chariot group chiton colossal composition cows deities drapery east frieze effect Elgin Room Ergastinae figure folds fore leg front girls goddess gods gold and ivory Greek head helmet Hephaestos Hera horses Ilissos instances knee Lapith left arm left hand long sides Lord Elgin mantle marble Michaelis nearer north frieze north side nude form Olympia original in Athens Parthenon frieze Pausanias peplos Pheidias Poseidon possible present procession raised recognise represent right arm right hand scene sculptured seated seen shield shoulders Slab south metopes south side spectator statue of Athenè statuette temple Theseus turning round vase west frieze west pediment whole wings woman women xoanon youth Zeus at Olympia
Popular passages
Page 118 - I trust, from ever forgetting—what is meant by the virtue of handling in sculpture. The projection of the heads of the four horses, one behind the other, is certainly not more, altogether, than three-quarters of an inch from the flat ground, and the one in front does not in reality project more than the one behind it, yet, by mere drawing,* you see the sculptor has got them to appear to recede in due order, and by the soft rounding of the flesh surfaces, and modulation of the veins, he has taken...
Page 118 - The projection of the heads of the four horses one behind the other is certainly not more altogether than three-quarters of an inch from the flat ground, and the one in front does not in reality project more than the one behind it, yet by mere drawing you see the sculptor has got them to appear to recede in due order, and by the soft rounding of the flesh surfaces and modulation of the veins he has taken away all look of flatness from the necks. He has drawn the eyes and nostrils with dark incision,...
Page 33 - Gr. Vasenmalerei iii. 33 ff. pl. 126].... It is true that the Greeks generally and Pheidias in particular regarded the east as on their left hand. On the base of his statue of Zeus at Olympia, representing the birth of Aphrodite, the sun was seen rising on the 'extreme left, the moon retiring on the right (Pausanias, v. 1 1, [8]), and on the base of his Athene in the Parthenon itself the same phenomenon occurs, if we may judge from the Lenormant copy of the statue.... But granting that this was a...
Page 119 - ... eyes and nostrils with dark incision, careful as the finest touches of a painter's pencil : and then, at last, when he comes to the manes, he has let fly hand and chisel with their full force, and where a base workman, (above all, if he had modelled the thing in clay first,) would have lost himself in laborious imitation of hair, the Greek has struck the tresses out with angular inci* This plate has been executed from a drawing by Mr.
Page 2 - Above the columns externally and round all the four sides of the temple were ninety two metopes, each consisting of a group of two figures two-thirds life size, in the highest possible relief, and full of the most beautiful workmanship. Within each of the two pediments or gables was an immense group of statues, the smallest equal to life size, the central figures colossal. Lastly, inside the Parthenon was the stupendous statue of Athene herself in gold and ivory by Pheidias. It was he who directed...