Chapter 4 - Aegean Art

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fresco

a durable method of painting on a wall by using watercolors on wet plaster

megaron

a rectangular audience hall that has a two-column porch and four columns around a central air well

Palace complex at Knossos

Culture/Period: Aegean, Minoan Art Location: Crete Date: 1500 BC - pier and door construction, ashlar masonry - largest structure - included central court, storerooms, shrines, residential, etc. - no fortifications - maze-like for defense and control - many light wells

Toreador fresco

Culture/Period: Aegean, Minoan Art Location: Knossos, Crete Date: 1450 BC - made with wet fresco - naturalistic in movement - could be continuous narrative - has two white men, a bull, and black man jumping over bull - might be a succession from boy to man

Treasury of Atreus

Culture/Period: Aegean, Mycenaean Art Location: Mycenae Date: 1250 BC - made of limestone - built in tholos to draw attention (later burglarized) - influenced by Egyptians - dromos entrance - man made hill covering

Lion Gate

Culture/Period: Aegean, Mycenaean Art Location: Mycenae Date: 1250 BC - made of limestone - huge lintel over gateway, relieving triangle provided space for thin stone relief - heads would have been made of gold/clay and put on afterwards with post-and-lintel - repeled bad spirits

Lion Hunt Scene

Culture/Period: Aegean, Mycenaean Art Location: Mycenae Date: 1600-1550 BC - made with bronze, gold, silver, and niello - decorated on black niello of the knife - naturalism in the lions' movement

Citadel and Palace of Mycenae

Culture/Period: Greek, Mycenaean Art Location: Mycenae Date: 1400 BC - made with cyclopean masonry, ashlar masonry - built for protection, manipulated visitors to be at residents' advantage - corbel arch marks the gate - Lion's Gate - thrown room at the highest point: megaron, clerestory technique

niello

a black sulfurous substance used as a decorative inlay for incised metal surfaces; the art or process of decorating metal in this manner

ashlar masonry

carefully cut and regularly shaped blocks of stone, fitted together without mortar

corbel vault

circular room formed by progressively projecting courses of stone or brick, which eventually meet to form the highest point of the vault

corbel arch

each course of masonry projects slightly beyond course beneath it, until the walls meet in an irregular arch to cover the span

cyclopean masonry

massive, crude walls that foreigners thought could only be made by the giants

pier and door construction

recesses that allow a great deal of flexibility in the admission of light and ventilation, and in the control or facilitation of movement; separates a hall into two unequal parts

relieving triangle

the triangular opening above the lintel that serves to lighten the weight to be carried by the lintel itself


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