The Sculptures of the Parthenon |
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... of the east and west fronts , even had they been well preserved , could not
rightly have been dissociated from the pediment sculptures immediately above
them . We have , therefore.
... of the east and west fronts , even had they been well preserved , could not
rightly have been dissociated from the pediment sculptures immediately above
them . We have , therefore.
Page
We have , therefore , placed the east and west metopes , such as they now are ,
in connection with the respective pediments . It has , however , been possible to
illustrate on one plate the entire series of the south metopes , partly from originals
...
We have , therefore , placed the east and west metopes , such as they now are ,
in connection with the respective pediments . It has , however , been possible to
illustrate on one plate the entire series of the south metopes , partly from originals
...
Page
12 CHAPTER III THE EAST PEDIMENT . . . . . . CHAPTER IV THE SOUTH
METOPES . . . . . . 53 CHAPTER V THE METOPES OF THE NORTH , EAST , AND
WEST SIDES . 76 CHAPTER VI THE FRIEZE . . . . 83 CHAPTER VII THE FRIEZE
...
12 CHAPTER III THE EAST PEDIMENT . . . . . . CHAPTER IV THE SOUTH
METOPES . . . . . . 53 CHAPTER V THE METOPES OF THE NORTH , EAST , AND
WEST SIDES . 76 CHAPTER VI THE FRIEZE . . . . 83 CHAPTER VII THE FRIEZE
...
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Alexander Stuart Murray. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PLATE HEAD OF YOUTH ,
FROM NORTH FRIEZE Frontispiece I . View of PARTHENON . · · · To face page 1
II . ST . PETERSBURG VASE AND EAST PEDIMENT OF OLYMPIA : : : : „ „ 13 III .
Alexander Stuart Murray. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PLATE HEAD OF YOUTH ,
FROM NORTH FRIEZE Frontispiece I . View of PARTHENON . · · · To face page 1
II . ST . PETERSBURG VASE AND EAST PEDIMENT OF OLYMPIA : : : : „ „ 13 III .
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Common terms and phrases
Acropolis action already angle appear artistic Athens attitude beauty birth body British Museum called Carrey's drawing carry cast Centaur central centre chariot close compared composition cows deities detail drapery east effect equally existing extreme face fact feet figure folds foot fragment frieze front girls give gods gold Greek hand head holding horses Illustrations indicate instances interested ivory Lapith left arm left hand legs less look manner mantle marble metopes natural nearer north frieze notice nude Olympia original Parthenon pass Pheidias PLATE Poseidon possible present procession question raised recognise regards relief remains represent right hand round scene sculptured seated seems seen separate shield shoulders side Slab space standing statue suggested supposed temple turning vase west pediment whole wings woman women young youth Zeus
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 1 - WHEN the Parthenon stood forth complete on the Acropolis of Athens in or about the year 438 BC, there was no other building in the whole of Greece comparable even in the mere extent and variety of its sculptures.1 Imagine a frieze 522 feet in length sculptured all along with figures nearly half life size, in many parts densely crowded till the marble could carry no more, the whole in very low relief and executed with marvellous detail. Above the columns externally and round all the four sides of...
Page 2 - ... 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 the whole of the...
Page 1 - B. c., there was no other building in the whole of Greece comparable even in the mere extent and variety of its sculptures.1 Imagine a frieze 522 feet in length sculptured all along with figures nearly half life-size, in many parts densely crowded till the marble could carry no more, the whole in very low relief and executed with marvellous detail. 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...