7. Symbolic elements such as
forms, hieroglyphics,
actions and gestures.
Their tombs required the
most used of sculpture.
Common materials used
are wood, ivory and stones
9. An example of
portraits presented
in rigid postures ,
and were simple and
powerful with very
little show of private
emotion.
10.
11. Hellenistic Style - an emphasis
on the representation of
movement for dramatic effects.
These sculptures had finally
evolved and showed all the points
of human anatomy and
proportion.
12. Shows an attitude
of maximum
tension, full of
compressed
energy, and about
to explode an
action.
13. 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 effects.
14. Carved in marble
It depicts battle scenes between
Romans and Germans
The best known and most elaborate
of all “sarcophagus” (a greek word
that is a box-liked funeral receptacle
for a dead body or “eating flesh”.
15.
16.
17. The dominant themes are
religious, everyday life scenes,
and motifs from nature.
Animals were used as symbols
(dove, deer, peafowl) while some
had acrostic signs.
18.
19. Some of the famous sculptural pieces
are reliquaries, altar frontals,
crucifixes, and devotional images.
These lightweight devotional images
were usually carried in the
processions both inside and outside
the churches.
20.
21. They have a greater freedom of
style.
Figures were given their own
attitudes instead of being set into
patterns and are more lively and
realistic.
22.
23. Compare and contrast:
Choose two sculptures from
the different era. Compare and
contrast the two using the
following indicators:
24. Sculpture #1 Sculpture #2
1. Name of Sculpture
2. Period, and era
when it was created
3. Materials used
4. The use of elements
of arts in the
sculptures (lines,
shape, color, texture)
5. The characteristics
of the sculpture