1. Roman Sculptures
most Roman sculptures are made of
monumental terra-cotta. They did not
attempt to compete with the free standing
Greek works of history or mythology but
rather they produced reliefs in the Great
Roman triumphal columns with continuous
narrative reliefs around.
2. The Portonacio Sarcophagus
used for the burial of Roman General
involved in the campaign of Marcus
Aurellius
The best known and most elaborate of
all “sarcophagus” (it is a box-liked funeral
receptacle for a dead body. Comes from a
Greek word “sarx” meaning flesh and
“phagein”meaning “to eat”)
3. It depicts battle scenes
between Romans and
Germans.
Carved in Marble.
4. Sarcopagus from cervetiri
Museo Nazionale de Villa Giulia,
Rome
made from Terra-cotta
a husband and wife are reclining
comfortably, as if they were on a
couch.
6. The dominant themes in Byzantine sculptures
are religious, everyday life senses, and motifs
from nature.
Animals were used as symbols (dove,deer,
peafowl)while some had acrostic signs(form
of writing in which taking the first
letter;syllable of word of different lines and
putting them together it can be read a
message) that contained a great theological
significance.
8. ROMANESQUE SCULPTURES
some of the famous sculptural pieces
are reliquaries, altar frontals, crucifixes, and
devotional images. Small individual works
of art were generally made of costly
materials for royal and aristocratic patrons.
These lightweight devotional images were
usually carried in the processions both
inside and outside the churches.
9. Last Judgement
tympanum (an architectural
element with in the arch or
pediment) of the west portal,
Cathedral of Saint-Lazare, Autun
Burgundy France,
10. GOTHIC SCULPTURES
Have greater freedom of style.
They no longer lay closely against the
wall, but begun to project outward.
Figures were given their own particular
attitudes instead of being set into
particular patterns and are more lively
and realistic.