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  • Phoenician Art

    The Phoenician culture

     

    Phoenicia rather than a country as such was what you could call it a Confederation of cities located in the coastal Mediterranean East in what today is the Lebanon. The phoenicians develop a very interesting art work that was highly related to their main socieconomic activity as merchandisers traveling by sea mostly. Their glass making skills, their ceramic and sculpture production have as principal objective satisfy the demand of this decorative items for many others country to whom they maintain a steady trade relationship.

    Other artistic manifestations like painting to decorate architecture  feature were more in respond to their needs of expressing their culture, traditions and believe while serve as well for the decorative purpose. The phoenician painting is study in a diferent article with more detail because their characteristic are very particular and differs from their contemporaries nearby countries.

     

     

    The Phoenicians were sea merchants who developed trade widely as a means of fundamental life. Vessels used were constructed with mastery by themselves in huge shipyards that credited his powerful development in maritime activity.

    They did not have appropriate or fruitful land to work with so it was big challengers for them grow an advanced agriculture as the inhabitants of the interior lands had developed, although they tried as hard as they could. In the summer the weather was so hot and dry that it hurt crops greatly. The settlement area in which they lived permanently was not ideal are all to survive on agriculture. They must them turn to trade and exchange of products as the best solution available due to its proximity to the Ocean.

    The Phoenicians as it was the case with other inhabitants of the Mediterranean region did not know money, for what his trade was based on the barter of goods with more or less the same value or that met at least both trading sides satisfaction.

    They approach to the coasts, landed by placing their boats not far from them, placed at the beach goods who wanted to Exchange and retreating again to their boats. Villagers placed objects that they understood could meet a value equated to the merchandise to the Phoenicians.

    The Phoenicians them returning to the beach; if they were satisfied with the goods left by the settlers they took them, but left it in place and waiting for a new offering is not and so until the barter satisfied both parties.

    With time the exchange of goods as a means of barter was made more difficult by the factor of the transportation and began to equate the value of objects and animals by various metals not only gold but also iron, copper ingots, and others representing a matched value to the goods. Giving account of the possibility and advantages of this form of pay for these goods gradually began to chop pieces of these ingots into smaller fragments and imprint them with the image representing that of the goods, then they added the print value of the good giving rise to the coins that were evolving and refining as well as expanding the diversity of images represented. The coins were much easier to transport and could not be altered in its value but they could split in smaller parts if necessary.

     

    This was how their Phoenician cities through trade and the Exchange could emerge and even develop as urban centers around 1500 BC with the exception of Byblos which already had prospered as an urban center from around the third millennium BC.

    In relation to these cities are mentioned some names in documents found in Egypt, Assyria and elsewhere that in one way or another related to the Phoenicians in ancient times. Their political organization corresponded to a system of independent cities States, each with its respective monarchs and systems of government administration, although they were always intensely communicated.

    These cities include:

    · Acre.

    · Tyre.

    · Sidon.

    · Ashdod.

    · Ugarit.

    · Byblos.

    Sidon, tyro and Byblos were the original cities and the most important, but cities developed in the colonies had the same distribution and constructive pattern. They were near the places of maritime transportation and had their necropolis near the city, on the outside of the walls that protected the city.

    Apparently the word Phoenix (purple in Greek) has its origin in the allusion that the Greeks did in their documents about the production that the Phoenician people obtained     of a purple tint very appreciated in the production of textiles.

     

    It may be the origin of the word Phoenicia to describe the region where live the people who produced the purple tint used for dye the textiles.

    They obtain the shells of Murex and the Cedar used to produce the base of this tint at the Lebanon region through trade and Exchange.

     

     

    The Phoenicians were excellent in the elaboration of many objects using as base materials such as wood, ivory, and metal, they also develop objects made of glass and of course textiles.

     

     

    Between 1500 and 1200 BC the Phoenician cities reached its period of prosperity, achieving control of commercial activities in that region. The Phoenicians lived for quite some time as independent peoples and this fact contributed to greater continuity and reinforcement of cultural traditions.

    They were dominated by the Egyptians during a period of time during which the Egyptian art influence became evident in many of their works of art at that time; although this influence was adapted over time to respond more at the character and tradition of the Phoenician culture as well as the new tendencies of the period that were more appreciate by the clients.

    Between the 6 and 4 BC Phoenicia was under the influence of the Persian Empire which had spread their power across the region of Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean Sea. In this period Persian art influences also the Phoenician artists being more evident in the architecture.

    Approximately between the 1100 and 1175 BC they managed to again be free of any domain or foreign influence until the so-called “Hellenistic period” around 300 BC in which the influence of Greek art in their works can be clearly seen since in this period.

    The customers asked for pieces and general merchandise that responded better to the characteristic of the popular Hellenistic art.

    In general it can be said that the Phoenician It is an art that is markedly Artisan; but also reached a level of refinement enough for  those objects created become a merchandise that could be traded, sale or exchange for others; being an important means for them offer quality products to satisfy the demand.

    In the Old Testament are quoted some passages which demonstrate the skills of these products made by the Phoenicians who were true works of art. Such is the case of the Hiram from Tiro artist who was commissioned to build and decorate the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem.

    However although the influence of Egypt in Phoenician art can be considered prominent cannot be excluded that other peoples in contact with them through trade as Syria, the Cypriot, the Assyrians and the Aegean peoples influenced as well, after all; these peoples also were clientele and their tastes, religion and traditions were taken into account by the Phoenicians in creating these works.

     

     

    The Phoenician is an art with eclectics features can be found even in the same piece of work influences from different cultures. As these works were intended for the sales marketing aspects such as customer tastes and trends of the period should be observed. On these bases had to be an original art, unpredictable and adaptable, but with quality.

    Therefore reaffirming what had previously stated can be said that in the Phoenician art are therefore two fundamental periods; the one that corresponds to a first period with the Egyptian and Assyrian influence and a second period in which a preference is denoted by Greek in the Hellenistic period.

    It was not in fact an art that was characterized by an abundance of works or that were designed to serve as a means of propaganda, religious, political or social.

    The most important Phoenician contribution in the history of art is the creation of a system of alphabetic writing which is the root of the Western alphabet when the Greeks adopted it and then spread to the rest of the world.

    Another of their important achievements was the implementation of a very effective navigation system that made possible their incursion through vast maritime areas. It is said they jealously kept their secrets concerning their knowledge of navigation and trade routes since they guaranteed them a prominent and supremacy position in the region. They also preferred sinking their own boats that leave these secrets were known.

    ARCHITECTURE

    The Phoenician culture do not developed a monumental architectures as the Egyptians does, although the walls and ports were built with an advanced technique of stones well squared, alternating with masonry. We must remember that their settlements in the coastal part were exposed to adverse weather conditions and had to adapt to the terrain.

     

    The Phoenicians built the temples in a high place. They made their homes and buildings in cubicles rather agglomerates. There was no wide or squares streets as the Greeks had and wasn’t similar to other cities in Mesopotamia either.

    THE SCULPTURE

    In what refers to the sculpture is noticeable aesthetic harmony alternating the two main influences the Greek and Egyptian already mentioned. There weren’t colossal sculptures with large dimension, abounding instead small figurines of varied typology such as a Sphinxes, female figurines, royal portraits and busts of gods. Parts of them have been found in very good condition as the well-known Goddess Tanit from the necropolis of the Puig d’es Molins that is exposed in the Museum of Ibiza.

    The main fields of interest of the Phoenician sculpture are the interesting reliefs of sarcophagi and funerary stele, many of them decorated with figurative motives of high quality and also combining the influences of Greek and Egyptian art.

     

     

    Peculiar sculptures showing the typical Phoenician features with almond-shaped eyes, long hair and smiling expression (although in very few quantities) have been preserves given us an idea of their racial and facial appearance.

     

     

    With unique features and style are figurines made in ivory and bone; a tradition that came from the Bronze Age.

    Original from the Palace of Nimrud, has been preserved:

    Woman in the window.

    – The Birth of Horus on the Lotus Flower.

    – The relief of Lion devouring a young Nubian.

    Mona Lisa, in the Iraq Museum.

    Metal work

    They develop great abundance in the Metallurgy and jewelry production; been a very profitable manufacture activity for them, created works of great finish that possess the same mix of styles that we had spoken earlier.

     

     

    Numerous figurines of bronze, some of which are covered with layers of gold, usually represent male characters with the popular Phoenician hooded “lebbede”. Pots and metal cups, and an infinite variety of jewelry, branch in which the Phoenicians showed a high level of expertise and beauty are equally abundant.

    Likewise, we can speak of the achievements reached in the production of weapons, toiletries, and furniture. The bronze used had around nine parts of copper and one part of Tin. This metals artistic works were made at the hands of skilled goldsmiths with alloys of high hardness that astonished by its quality considering the era in which they were made.

    Objects destined for war stand out above all, the shields were in a way slightly convex, round and instead of the regular projection had a long cone that stood out in the middle. Both shields and helmets were decorated with reliefs in which they elaborated some designs with vegetable and animals motifs as well as sequences of simple geometric patterns such as circles.

    In addition to the bronze and copper also used other more resistant materials such as iron and lead to the construction of these weapons; material that is presumed probably imported from the region of Spain mostly since their own country has not abundant deposits.

    GLASSWARE PRODUCTION AND MARKETING

    Another important contribution by the Phoenicians to the history of art is the discovery of the production of glassware that is conferred to them.

    There is a story; telling about how few Phoenician merchants realized when they made a bonfire on the beach that some particles of sand mixed with pieces of nitro they ported and used instead of stone wore melted by the heat of the fire and had formed a clear mixture that after cooling it hardened. They used nitro in the absence of appropriate stones in the beach to accommodate their utensils on them in a fire and prepare dinner so it was that accidental and fortuned incident that gave rise to one of the major industries of production of objects made of glass.

     

    These objects included domestic use, jewelry, part of furniture, sacred urns and objects for religious worship as well as vases for decoration of palaces and temples. The small glass recipients the Phoenician elaborate to contain perfume were particularly appreciated and popular.

    To see more photos of Phoenician glass work I encorage you to visit the photostream of Badran Ghosn a Lebanon photographer who have very good picture about this temathic.

     

    The Phoenicians made three fundamental classes of glass:

    1. Transparent glass without color.
    2. Semitransparent glass with color.
    3. Opaque glass with porcelain-like finish.

    Method for the manufacture of glass objects used by the Phoenicians was quite similar to that used today except for the fact that they do not used frequently the empty glass techniques of file the glass mixture into molds, probably because they could not reach easy a temperature to melt the glass and be poured into these moulds, although it is possible that they used certain moulds for small objects as balls of glass for jewelry and beetles made also of glass.

    Ceramic

    Phoenician ceramics unfortunately do not counts with the amount of physical evidence   since due to the low quality of materials in which they were made and the time elapse, no enough of this object were preserved. Only fragments in the majority of cases found that do not provide sufficient information in how the majority of them may have been originally.

    It is assume that  a not very poor quality clay were used in the early days by the Phoenicians, but it is presumed also that they were not particularly beautiful works of art; just mere vessels not decorated without glaze with the simple practical function of containing liquid substances as oil as well as milk, water, honey and unguents.

     

    Some ceramic vessels later possessed certain decoration with geometric shapes such as lines and a kind of drawing with clear lines on a dark background. Mud with which the majority of pottery decorations were developed at this stage does not seem to have been of very high quality but as well as other objects there is evidence that they were widely marketed towards different areas of the region. Eventually they made an effort to beautify these vessels for best results in marketing so they used the technique of the glaze that was much more appreciated. This is how ceramics began to have higher quality progressively with strong Egyptian influence first and Greek later.

    But we could say that in general it was not a notable artistic activity and as decorative art do not transcended.  The influence of the Egypt and Greece styles was predominant but the Phoenician  did not have the quality of these one repeating systematically the same patron without any new technique or a particular characteristic that really distinguish.

     

     

     

     


  • Assyrian Culture

    Ancient Assyrian Art

     

    Assirian warriors agains Lion.

     

    At the Extreme northern of Mesopotamia settled the Assyrian people who with a long history in the area were subjected to the Kingdoms of most powerful peoples of the South for a while. Of course many elements that contributed to shape the Assyrian Culture were inherited from the Sumerians and that was manifested in their creations; in which techniques and artistic procedures were set over the rich Knowledge inherited. 

    The first Kings of the nation had his residence in Ashur, until adverse desert climate conditions as well as the attack of the Babylonians neighbors led rulers to the decision to build a second capital at Nineveh. They brought with them their common language and their artistic traditions from Sumer, but modified them subsequently resulting in a bypass that emerged from the fusion of Sumerian roots and language and the arts of Babylon. Assyrian State grew up around four cities fed by the Tigris waters.

    The Assyrians nevertheless the constant cultural exchange were very different from the Babylonians since the ancient Assyrian were cruel warriors who used terror and brute force to conquer and impose, beyond what any other race had done until then. Their blood thirsty conquest campains for more teritories was also determined for the legacy wich each king whanted to be remember as the grandiose conquer of all.

    They acquired this extreme hardening of character for their previous clashes with other tribes that had dropped ruthlessly its population in the invasions suffered, this aspect added to their concept that the world would end if they lost the battles; accentuated the brutality which they undertaked their conquests. Its history is littered with wars and conquests, but also of bloody defeats, it was a fact documented by the kings; how in the process of conquer they kill every man woman and child of entire populations and reduce to ashes their houses and buildings. Is a great dicotomy how this skilled civilization was also capable of ruthless violency.

     

     

     

    The Assyrians imposed on conquered peoples a very well-organized State with harsh laws, but it is a reality that without them it would have been impossible to maintain control over the extended territories they grabbed. With strong control, starting with their warriors up to the conquered population an iron discipline was imposed.

    They see the life events based mainly in the here and now, in the everyday experiences, in its heroic legends and the fight for survival. These are very different conceptions about life than other cultures has as for example the Egyptians who look at life as a period of the existence that should continue in the afterlife.

     

     

    Assyrian architecture

     

    Babylonians neighbors brought the knowledge and techniques applied to artistic creation. The Assyrian people maintained contact points through trade and exchange with many other people around them.  This contacts allow them to learn new techniques and even copy some styles besides the one from Babylonia although, they further personalized and make them their own. Among those techniques, the drafting of beautifully decorated polychromatic glazed bricks is the most distinctive and the one the Assyrians used plenty to decorate palaces and temples.

    One of the various themes used include, the representation of injured Lions majestically and dramatically represented on low relief decorating their bulidings. These Lions capture the expressions of pain, anguish, pride or ferocity according to which scene the artist represents in the image, doing so with amazing realism.

    They also produced stone carving sculptures and paintings in which the theme of the Lions was present with human figures fighting them. Other animals such as the noble horse and ox were also represented.

     

    Assirian relief representing the drama of lion confrontation

     

    Have come to ours days stunning examples of decoration applied to architecture as it is the case of winged protective figures by combining the human image and animal placed in the entries of important buildings Those  figures shows a level of detail and care in the termination  that always astonishing viewers; more if is taking into account they were made at so remote time in the history of humanity is like some how they inherited some previous wisdom.

    At Nimrud or Jursabad doors have few huge sculptures acting like guardian, (winged sculptures with human head and five bull leg) 

     

     

    The narrative frieze, which comes from the sequences scenes representation in prints and stamps, will be the most important artistic element of Assyrian art.

    The construction of Ziggurat, from Sumer constructive pattern element stays in Assyrian culture as well and reach higher altitude (up to seven platforms), also with the techniques of constructive reinforcement applied.

    This monumental proportions produce a grandiloquent imposing effect very well serving the religious adoration and propaganda purposes, as well as the militar and political power who commission them to anonimous artisans.

    On its walls are placed reliefs with the story telling of gods and Kings heroic encounters and battles. The incorporation of decorated elements with marble and alabaster highlighted further the splendor of these buildings.The Assyrians Ziggurat had no external stairs, it is amounted to the top by a staircase from the lobby inside the bulilding; they also built smaller temples to worship secondary deities.

    The exact purpouse of this altitude in Ziggurats could have been as well to achieve some other funtion as well not yet clear, by high magnetisms in those locations make schorlars think that important funtional activities related to worshiping the gods took place in them.

     

     

    The four most important ancient Assyrian cities were:

    Ashur (by the God Ashur) also named the entire Assyrian region.

    Arbela.

    Nimrud (or Calah)

    Nineveh. (For Nina, Goddess of the Assyrians)

     

    The Assyrian palaces

    Assyrian palaces were not behind in regard to the diversity of new construction techniques employed. 

    –    They hastens the construction of walls, widening them.

    –    The semicircular arch system and the elliptical for doors is used with preference.

    –     Numerous steps give access to the upper levels using some of  Sumerian and Babylonian technique’s bud adding their own contribution; emphasizing the majestic of palaces and temples.

    –    Huge doors made in wood and metal has often also carved relieves completing the decoration.  

    –    Large hallways or corridors, communicated the rooms of these palaces with the more important rooms.

     –   Their Windows shows an innovative technique allowing the entrance of light and more visibility to the outside, but would be effective for the purposes of security.

    –    These palaces have large court yards that were accessed from galleries with columns made in wood on stone plinth.

     

    Imagen reconstruction of Assur-Izir pal pallace in ancient Assiria

     

    The construction of their City-palaces sets new representative elements that directly respond to their idiosyncrasies and particular ways to see life since Assyrians more of the time were inmerse in militar confrontations.

    As an example of these city-palaces was the one built by order of Tukulti-Ninurta I (1244 BC and 1207 BC) in the city of Ashur, which shows a tendency to the stylization of images that represent the gods, related mainly to their decorative appearance. In them can be appreciate better the representation of normal size human beings figures, which the one who symbolize the gods  in huge size in comparison to the humans.

    The Assyrians also tried  mundane secular subjects in their decorations recounting stories of the daily events of Kings and subjects, trades, farming and elaboration of utensils.

     

     

    First Assyrian Empire

    Towards 1810 BC Assyrian king Shamshi-Adad I managed to extend the territory of Assyria, from the Zagros Mountains to the Mediterranean Sea. He may have been the first ruler to establish a centralized Empire organized in the ancient Middle East. His Kingdom was divided into districts.

    This first Assyrian Empire with Shamshi-Adad did not last long, as neither last his son mandate Ishme-Dagan I (from 1780 who was defeated near 1760 BC by the Babylonian King Hammurabi.  Assyria became that way part of the Babylonian Empire until the Babylonian defeat at the hands of the Kassites in the 16 century BC.

    About 1500 BC Assyria became a dependency of Mitanni, a Kingdom that controlled all the North of Mesopotamia. The Assyrian king Ashur-uballit I around 1364 BC freed Assyria from Mitanni and even annexed some of its territories. This King was followed by others who spread the borders and kept away to neighbors coming to dominate a large area of Mesopotamia.

    The ancient Assyrian culture is very well documented in numerous reliefs and tablets that were found by archaeologists, as well as are their works of art discovered in diverse places such as storages, building ruins and tumbs, that were cover trough time by sand and debris. From one of this royal tumbs had been recovered invaluable treasures that show they amazing workmanship skills of the Assyrian civilization. This magnificient artifacts dating from 800 B.C conform the famous “Treasure of Nimrud”.

     

    Treasure of Nimrud

     

    Examples of the Treasure of Numrud

     

     

     

     

    Their way of looking at life; the struggle for survival, achievements and the everyday mundane things, also had an important role in its formation as a culture. They represented those traditions by all means trough artistic creation using whatever they had at its disposal in terms of materials and techniques. There some wonderful relief depicting scenes of royal huntings in the British Museum.

     

     

    Of the topics addressed by the Assyrian Art the most abundant are the representation of animals; including lions and horses as well as images were the bodies parts of animals are fusion with the human figure. Their sculptures and reliefs both tells us about whow they looks like, their clothes, weapons, rituals, farming customs, and their everyday life events.The technique of the relief executed in stone, diorite, metal and clay was an effective means of expression of their beliefs, their culture and their conception of life. These reliefs were made on walls, utility vessels and also those made for the purpose of worship and burial. They combine the decorative purpose with the utilitarian.

     

     

     

     

    Assyrian relief depicting archers shooting at war.

     

    Artistic works were usually performed using the natural elements they have available like stone, alabaster, shells, lapis lazuli, diorite, marble and ivory. They were as well masters in the elaboration of gold and silver objects with practical and decorative use but, exxels as well making bronze objects that mainly used for weapons, shields, spears, sword and knifes.

     

     

    Religious Beliefs

     Hundreds of gods in Mesopotamia were adored who charged importance based on the strength of each ethnic group, region or city. In general there was a great religious tolerance. Marduk and Ashur were two deities that were imposed to the rest, due to the growing influence of Babylonia and Assyria. The strength of the conquerors nevertheless; influence on the conquered “tolerance apart”.

    They beliefs gods often took human form and visited them depending on their desire to behave like humans. The King considered the Ashur representative on Earth was also the high priest. All these faiths required the maintenance of large temples, priesthoods and offerings to the gods and the files found inscribed on clay tablets showed the need of large quantities in the actual budget for the performance of such activities.

    Those writing information as well as the relief found give us an idea of the importance the Assyrian state conceded to the religious matters, although it was not as in the case of Egypt the number one priority, was nevertheless also important.

     

     

    The Assyrian religion had the following gods which were widely represented in art.

     

    Ashur (God of the gods) that dwelt in the city of Ashur.

    Ishtar (the battle and love).

    Ninurta (God of hunting and war).

    Samash and Adad (Baal), God of storms, presided over the divination.

    Harran (God of the moon took great importance towards the end of the Assyrian Empire).

    Nin (was also the Moon Goddess), gave its name to Nineveh among the Assyrian cities.

    The “epic of Gilgamesh”, was still very popular all over Mesopotamia and Assyria was not the exception. He was a popular heroe who battle evil but as other mystic characters display ambiguous behavior, sometimes was confuse by the imagination of people as a King and cruel demigod who performed great feats, located in the year 2600 BC, whose legend comes from Sumer, therefore also represented in Assyrian art.

    Their lust for conquest brought them to seize Babylon and Armenia. About 884 BC it began a long string of victories that put Assyria at the head of the power in a vast region. When Ashur-Nassir-Pal assumes the power; his military campaigns and invasions conquered neighboring towns and caused numerous villages’ great devastation. Death and destruction was left behind their stormy pace.

     The same great Egypt succumbed to the rise of a fierce but organized army which used clever military strategies that caused heavy casualties to his enemies.

     

    Assyrians civilization main achivements.

     

    As it is typical of such extensive invasions ocurrence a retroinfluence between different cultures; both the invaders and the subject peoples receive mutual cultural influences that span to different manifestations. From constructive techniques, architectural design, building materials and artistic creation. Also count musical, language and writing influences.  Are not exempt from this list aspects in which the Assyrians were also skilled such as those related to the Organization of States, policy, the creation and specialization of trades, the techniques used in agriculture, the development of branches of knowledge as mathematics, astronomy and medicine.

    Cuneiform writing is still used in the clay tablets, seals and even the correspondence. Thanks to it are known so many aspects of the economic system and how they functioned for the Assyrian State. Among  the techniques developed by the Assyrian culture in the production of many  military armament are: carriages, swords, spears, bows and arrows. The  horse-driven two-wheel carts was a very important element who allow their military campaign gain so many battles.

     

     

     The Assyrians were the first to recognize the advantages of the iron and the bronze as early as 1000 BC their army had been equipped with arms and armor made of iron. These weapons were systematically improved and they were not only strong and effective in combat but they also were often beautifully decorated.

    In the year 609 BC the Assyrians troops capitulate after a series of events that weaken the power of the Empire both internally and under the pressure of Babylon and Medes. The great empire Assyrian disappears from history after hundreds of years in control of the region of Mesopotamia and adjacent land and after have been imposed through violence and terror carried out by an army very disciplined and trained to conquer and overwhelm its passage without mercy.

    The great empire that succeeded with Tiglath-Pileser III at the head of the power acquire however important knowledge, legacy from the Assyrians in the art and organization of financial administration affairs of the States. This knowledge was put into practice with an effectiveness that the world had not seen up to that point.

     


  • Persian art. Main History Elements

    Main History elements in the Persian Art

     

     PERSIA ANCIENT ART

     

    The art of Persians people in ancient times reflected their inclination to represent the reality of their lifes and history with clarity; without complications in the messages that the art works  intended to transmit. In the great Iran which corresponds to the present-day States of: Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan and neighboring regions was born  one of the richest artistic heritage in the world, The Persian Art; where diverse disciplines including architecture, painting, fabrics, ceramics, calligraphy, metallurgy and masonry were developed with highly advances techniques and imaginative artistic expressions.

    History is obviously a very powerful factor not only to shape the cultural identity of a region, but also to give color and local identification to it. History contributes to be able to define the dominant cultural characteristics of the people in each region and for instants their art tendencies. This statement in Persian art is very important to take in consideration, since in each period of this imaginative culture the art expression of the people was very aware of their social, political and economic surroundings. Their art was a reflection of their every day issues and was represented in all the drama and poetic means they could use. Not only was the architecture, painting sculpture, ceramic, golsmith or silversmith they extend this means of expression to poems, historical narratives, and fantastic stories.

     

    The Persian Achaemenid Dynasty

     

    The Achaemenid Dynasty marks the emergence of an important stage in the culture of Persia. Aqueménides Persian rulers embraced the artistic achievements of foreign civilizations and absorption occurred in their culture, but this artistic achivements did not satisfy the Persians who gradually created new and particular artistic and technical patterns much more related to the imagination and the histrionic expressiveness of facts and feelings of the Persian people.

    The historical archives which refer to the civilization of the Persians show data ranging from 1000 BC to 600 B.C. These historical data are not marked relevant for the Persian Art until the emerge of Cyrus I (550 until 530 BC).

     

    The reign of Cyrus the Great

    During the reign of Cyrus the Great, Persia expands to the West and Northwest beyond the borders of what is today Iran to include Babylonia, some of the Aegean Islands and Anatolia (Asia Minor known in our days by Turkey).The son of Cyrus, Cambyses (530 to 522 BC), forces the Pharaoh of Egypt and the islands of Cypress to accept the Persian rule.

     

    Persepolis Palace, Duomo, Cupulas
    Persepolis Palace, Duomo, Cupulas

     

    The reign of Darius

    Persia empire reached its geographical peak during the reign of Darius I (522 to 486 BC) Dario’s Government reaches from sea Eral to the Persian Gulf. It also stretched from the first cataract of the Nile River to the Valley of the Rio Hindu.

    The rule of Darius covers many cultures. He and his son used foreign artists to promote and strengthen its image of power dare carefully using certain amount of sculptures. This has resulted in the proliferation and the splendor of artistic monuments and buildings with great architectural value. Among these monuments are the Palace of Persepolis sculptures. Susa, Parsedae and Persepolis where the three most important cities of Persia.

    Darius listed skilled artists and craftsmen natives of Egypt; Greek Ionian and Mesopotamia. They constructed the buildings on a large scale to propagandize his power, so that the effect on the spectator should be daunting.

     

    Ancient persian relief from Persepolis Palace

     

    The Palace of Darius was a resulting stylistic amalgam of influences from countries and regions where all these artists that he recruited came from.

     However nevertheless to concur hear so much artistic talent with different inheritance, the constructive design and the decoration of each of the parts of the Palace answered perfectly the needs of expression, ideological and religious of Persian culture as well as a grandiloquent representation of power, the main intension of the message transmitted.

     

    The Sassanid period

     

    The Sassanid period  which comprises the entire final period of classical antiquity that even survive a few centuries, is considered one of the most important and influential of the Iran historical periods. Here occurred the greatest achievements of Persian culture, and constituted the last great Iranian Empire before the Islamic conquest of Persia and the adoption of the Islam as a religion throughout the territory.

     

    Sassanid period ancient persian art.
    Sassanid period ancient persian art.

     

    Persia had an important influence on the Roman civilization culture and also spread their influence well beyond, reaching as far away as Europe, the India, China and the Africa territories.

     

    The Persian culture plays a key role in the formation of the medieval, European and Asian art, reaching the budding Islamic world as well.

    The aristocratic and exclusive culture of the Sassanid dynasty became a Persian ‘Renaissance’. The precedence of what would be later known as ‘Islamic culture’ (architecture elements, draperies mastery, jewelry, writing and other skills) were adopted by the broader Islamic world from the Sassanid Persians.

     

    Handmade ancient persian rugs utilized natural ingredients

     

    The famous tapestry, the beautiful works of precious metalwork, reliefs worked in different types of materials as well as the frescoes of bright colors and eloquent expressiveness are today invaluable art work and palpable testimony of the importance of the Sassanid culture; who saw themselves as successors of the Aqueménides after the interlude of Hellenistic and Parthian rule, and were convinced that their destiny was to restore the greatness of Persia.

    The art of this period reveals an astonishing vitality, anticipating in some respects to the key elements of Islamic art. Sassanid art combined elements of traditional Persian art with elements and influences of Hellenistic art.

    The conquest of Persia by Alexander the great began the spread of Hellenistic art into Western Asia. These artistic influences were accepted only externally, the essence; never were complete assimilated.  

    Hellenistic art was interpreted freely by the peoples of the Near East. Thus the Sassanid period was a reaction against these art forms. Sassanid art revived traditional native Persian forms and, and already in the Islamic period, these forms reached the shores of the Mediterranean.

     

     

    With the rise of the Sassanid’s, Persia regained much of the power and stability they long had lost leading to the resurgence of the art based on the traditions of the time of the Aqueménida culture.

    The unique characteristic of Sassanid architecture is the distinctive use of space. Sassanid architects conceived his buildings in terms of masses and surfaces. This led to the use in abundance of brick walls decorated with molded or carved stucco.

     

    The Islamic Period

    After the completion of the Sassanid Persians period of predominance Persia integrated the list of regions that embrace Islam. This religion resulted in important changes in the Persian culture covering all areas of the spiri­tual and intellectual elements which determine the life of a traditional society.

     

     

    If we define the culture as the one to cover these basic elements, “according to Western concepts”, then, there is undoubtedly a unique Islamic culture with different ‘zones’ or worlds contained therein, ‘worlds‘ that are United by the spirit and the sacred form of tradition and are separated by local factors, geographical, linguistic, ethnic or otherwise.

    Many factors alone, or in combination could be enumerated, as they have been responsible for the creation of these Islamic cultural ‘worlds’ and they can be used as criteria for the delineation and description of each.

     

     

    It is clear that the racial and ethnic characteristics of the peoples who have embraced Islam have been a very decisive factor in local cultural variations. These features have affected the language and literature, artistic forms of all kinds, which include clothing, ornamentation, the various styles of calligraphy and architecture, music, the creation of tapestries and metalwork; as well as painting and ceramics processing.

    Once Islamism converted, the Persians became the main instrument of the expansion of Islam in most of the rest of the Asian territory, at least until Malaysia. The Islamic period has given; as predecessors History periods in the Persian Culture, innumerable and invaluable works of art that resonate in perfect accordance with the traditions and the religious fervor with which they were made for and shown, as in the previous periods evolutionary characteristics inherent not only to the history but also to the region in which they were created.

     

    persian ornament

     

     


  • Roman Art. Painting

    Paint in Ancient Rome.

    Rome in ancient times.

    The Romans entered the Iberian Peninsula in 218 B.C. they started to create stable settlements from the middle of the 2nd century B.C  The Romanization of numerous villages; either by wars or socio-cultural influence is propagated intensely and lasted more than five centuries. The Romans have left on its soil archaeological remains that have enabled study this interesting and rampant culture that had so much influence over the course of the history of mankind, laying the foundations of moral codes, justice, politics, religion, urbanization, and military strategy.

     Rome was a people of farmers, merchants, warriors. The Romans showed greater interest in the practical things and their artistic works had always a utilitarian stamp. Dominated people, founders of a vast Empire, the Roman fundamental concern was  to maintain dominance over the colonized territories, for which they mobilized powerful armies. The Roman empire gave life to a dense body of laws that tightened the relations between the metropolis and the provinces, and developed a gigantic constructive work with a varied repertoire of architectural forms perfectly adapted to its purpose of propaganda and funcionality.  Their main merit is to have extended the Greco-Roman civilization for a vast part of the known world.

    The Roman art develops from the Greek and Etruscan influences, reached its peak in the era of the Empire. Was held in Italy from the year 200 before C. until the 4th century after C. Some people had the opinion that Roman Art is inferior to the Greek art, but it was actually more varied, more flexible and in some aspects is closer to the modern art ; its influence in the art of the middle ages and the Renaissance was notable.

    Romans painting

    The roman’s paintings used new colors that were obtained from the combination of different substances as a base material, so the range is broader than the one used previously by the Greeks or even the Egyptians. Their painting show figurative features and innovative resources to develop them as faithful as possible to the reality, using elements such as mainstreaming, symmetry, the use of shadows to highlight the figures from the background and others with exquisite taste and mastery.

    They used the technique of tempera color stains, applied with brushstrokes loose, without detail, as did centuries later the Impressionists with pretentious touches of shadow and light. Also in the painting is palpable a trend towards realism with some topics preferred such as the portrait, caricature and landscape.

    Their works have a practical character used to decorate, but also had a strong propaganda elements to serve as support of the spreading of philosophy and Roman politics to the peoples with whom they had contact. In Roman Mural painting  the fresco was the preferred method; although it has been pointed out that they must have used other techniques and even combine them.

    Roman painting

    From the 1st century, there are two pictorial trends or styles:

     

    –       The Neo attic style: they cares for the human form, highlighting issues of mythology and the  epic.

     

    –       The Hellenistic style – Alexandrian: which shows concern for painting rural farming landscape and the sea.

     

     

    In Roman painting there are four styles observed:

     

    1.     Inlay. (Imitates the decoration of marbles)

     

    2.     Architectural. (Imitates the lining and architecture)

     

    3.     Mixed or ornamental. (It is a mixture of the previous two)

     

    4.     Illusionist or staged. (Reloaded a mix of the second with the third style)

     

    The erotic Roma’n painting with explicit  sexual themes.

    The philosophy of liberality allowed that the theme of the nude in both sexes could be expressed even with scenes quite explicit and daring where the figures appear occasionally in acts of sexual content, which can even today blush some. Paints with sexual content have been found more often in the walls of houses were sexual activities were perform as meaning of sexual services and also in the walls of the changing rooms at the public baths.

     

    Roman Mosaic

    Romans first start using the mosaic technique of decoration in walls and ceilings but later this complex technique was rather used more in the pavements. Magnificent paints decorations made from tesserae of marble, (an individual little tile, usually formed in the shape of a cube) depict a variety of themes using sometimes only two colors or in the case of the more complex one a rich polychrome.

    Mosaic had wide representation in the palaces; they represent the same characteristics of the rest of Roman’s paint made in fresco or on other elements. Coming from Greek influences develop a more roman style were architectonic designs, geometrics or nature scenic decorations are elaborated resulting in works of expressive beauty were even precious metallic components like for example gold contribute to their splendor.

    The Mosaic artist were very well recognized and well paid and the trade secrets of elaborations were mostly passing from families’ roots generation after generation. The flours in private villages, public buildings, the thermals rooms in public baths and the aristocratic palaces were all highly enriched with the mosaic decorations.

     

    Themes more frecuently used in mosaic technique in Roma:

    • Marine
    • Death nature.
    • Heroic legends
    • Erotic themes                                                      
    • Military Affairs
    • The portrait
    • Hunting topics 
    • Mythology
    • Geometric

     

    Roman Mosaic from the Old cathedral of Cartagena

    Mosaic roman from the cathedral of Chartagen

     

    Other roman painting techniques

    Along with those other pictorial techniques used are the trestle; that were very popular among the upper classes of the Roman Empire and the small fresco painting. There was another technique well known as Encaustic made in fabric or wood. Many details of the Roman painting are Know through the frescoes found in the city of Pompeii, they are seen as is they are copies of Greek paintings; based on the themes they are showing and the techniques used.

    The poverty of the architectural materials used in Roman buildings enabling a development of mural painting. The use of materials such as concrete, brick or masonry, were forced to put a coating on them. So walls were treated with a layer of white and fine stucco which later were polish. The stucco was marble reduced to powder mixed with lime or cola to apply them to the wall.

     

    Two names stand out as precursors artist of Roman history painting:

     

    –       Fabius: Painter hardly known, lived around 300 BC.

     

    –       Painter Pacuvius of which we know nothing of his artistic production although we imagine that his tendency towards the Greek would be decisive.

     

    These two painters tend to represent a kind of historical paintings in which depictions of battles and the commemorations of WINS would be the most frequent topics. These military scenes were conceived as propaganda posters that exhibited the winners Generals in their triumphal walks to return home.

     

    The Roman technique of produce murals inside the houses was inspired by the Greek, with if refers as the wall dividing into three parts:

     

    –       The base foundation.

     

    –       Superstructure

     

    –       Intermediate zone.

     

    Another innovation of Roman painting is the opening of the wall through a painted perspective in the form of open window in which introduced the characters in two ways:

     

    –       Through small figurative paintings

     

    –       By placing the characters in the baseboards as a theatrical space.

     

    The absence of furniture and large patios and room’s made necessary those coatings. The painting that has come down to us is not representative of the Roman era; the painters in this era were craftsmen with rather special abilities and knowledge about techniques and Greek themes.

    The colors were applied to the wall newly plastered and wet, with this made that these colored inks penetrated, creating a thick layer. Sometimes they painted directly if the plaster had dried. This painting is immediately recognized because of it little adhesion of the color who produced then to crack more easily.

    third Pompeii style.

     

    The Stylistic and chronological division of Roman painting in Pompeii. 

     

    • Early Pompeian style

     

    • Second Pompeian style

     

    • Third Pompeian style

     

    • Fourth Pompeian style.

     

    Fourth POmpeii style frescos.

    The earthquake and Volcanic eruption happened in the city of Pompeii in year 63 caused such damage that most of the city had to be rebuild. Therefore all coatings were made again, despite the fact that some years later they were damaged in the eruption of Vesuvius. The technique used in these new paintings sought the unreal effects leaving aside the expertise and previous amazing refinement. Architectural simulations are replaced with fantastic painted compositions; they are not referred to an objective reality.

    Dionysian initiation frescos from the Villa of Mysteries in Pompeii.

     The examples that have reached us, both Rome and Pompeii, make that we can differentiate between the two geographical areas.

     

    –       In Pompeii there is a predilection for bright purple, red cinnabar, the deep blue colors, or the golden yellow for the columns.

     

    –       However in Rome, the intonations are clear on totally white backgrounds.

    Roman woman portrait.

     


  • Mycenaean Art.

    Mycenaean Vase

     

     

    Mycenaean art

     The Mycenaean civilization art arose around the year 1600 BC, compared to the pacific and joyously Minoan Culture was of quite solemn nature and beligerant tendencies. These two cultures formed the basis of which was latter the Greek Civilization.  Is necessary to study this culture to better understand the archaic period of Greek art. The history and legends of the Mycenaean people has come to us by the writings left behind by the Greek poet Homer (c. 750 BC) among other chronics that made also references about them. In those cronics is told that they became the dominant culture of the island; been their influence evident in all artistic manifestations discovered in Mycenae in the Peloponnese region which ruins and ancient artifacts give us today a glance about the interesting life and culture of this civilization. 

     

     

    Mycenaean Cultures develop takes place in the age of bronze of the Greek peninsula and succeeded the ancient Minoan culture of Crete. Although the Mycenaean and Greek cultures were two separate entities, they occupied the same lands, successively. The archeological studies made in those territories confirm the differences between them as been to complete separate culture after for many years was considered only one.

    Mycenae was a society with hierarchies; the figure of the King was the Supreme exponent of the political and economical power control. The Mycenae or Achaeans, as they called themselves were a fundamentally warrior people whom were also highly specialized in the development of techniques to elaborate weapons, arrows, long sword and armor with sheets of metal and teeth of wild boar helmets (with strength and durable characteristic intended for personal protection in the fight).

     Architecture

     They created architectural elements including cyclopean masonry and “Beehive” tombs, were great engineers who designed and built remarkable bridges. Likewise stands the construction of enormous strengths of stones placed one on top of each other without mortar, which protected their palaces and buildings in general with those asthonished walls.

     

     

    The Mycenaean cities were built  on top of the hills surrounded by these walls mentioned. This factor contributed to succesfully give them advantages from the  strategic point of view. Their buildings were not complex in structure though since they were constructed ssentially destined for practical use. Were built around a central megaron (an architectural form consisting of a porch, vestibule, and large hall with a central hearth) functioned as the king’s audience chamber as well.

    The structural design they use was an earlier element of Helladic architecture.The Greek learned later from this previous culture, how to build gates and tombs amount other architectural construction techniques. From their architecture are remaining the Lion Gate, and the Treasury of Atreus as two example of a Tholos tomb.

     

    Pottery artisans and jewelry

    Mycenaean were impressive potters themselves and prodigious goldsmiths as well; they developed a simply functional ceramics; beautifully decorated with geometric motifs which applied also in the elaboration of objects for personal use. They widely used the gold (for which had special predilection), reached a high degree of mastery in the use of different other techniques and materials as well like bronce and other alloys.

     

    Mask Mycenae in polychromatic limestone

     

    They assimilated elements of the previous culture (Minoan) especially in the artisanal part with naturalistic elements like flowers or animal representation principally seen in the first stage. Are supposed that Etruria’s artisans worked for the Mycenaeans leaving their mark in the pottery and jewels.

     

     

     

    Some of their inventions to develop the various objects for everyday life use were extraordinary. They make as well luxury items, such as carved gems, jewelry, vases in precious metals, and glass ornaments showing remarkable skills and attention to details resulting in formidable pieces. Many of them marvel us today for their beauty making us wander how in such remote times they could reach that mastery with pretty much rudimentary utensils and tools. They were skilled traders also carrying wine, oils and spices all over the region along many other objects of their own creation been respected and even afraid since they were fierce warriors.

     

     

     

    The fragments of Mycenaean paintings found in Tiryns, Pylos and Greece, represent what is presumed were impressive murals both Mycenaean and Minoan. These paintings were not the frescos type as traditionally has been known by the Egyptians murals, in this case the Mycenaean elaborate theirs by applying paint to tempera on dry plaster as well.

     

    pintura micenica

     

    Topics of Mycenaean murals include everyday life event and depictions of war scenes as well of hunting, sacrifices representations, processions, mythology and legend and of course reference to nature since they inherited this inclination from the Minoan. Their scene representation do not care particularly for the spatial order been however pretty stereotyped. They represent the figures over an essentially plain background; like is they were cut off or outlined over that background.

     

     

     

    Religion

    Not much is known about the religious practices of the Mycenaean and that include the name of their Gods. It things though that Poseidon was a popular deity. Other Gods included:

     

    –          The Lady of the Labyrinth.

     

    –          Diwia (Sea Goddess)

     

    –          Zeus.                                   

     

    –          Hera.

     

    Fresco from one of the rooms inside the Cult House at Mycenae
    Fresco from one of the rooms inside the Cult House at Mycenae.

    –          Ares.                                   

     

    –          Hermes

     

    –          Athena.

     

    –          Artemis.

     

    –          Dionisos.

     

    –          Erinya.

     

    The scarce temples or shrines remaining where religious practices might have been performed don’t say much about the insight of their religious believes. Has been assuming all rituals took place on open ground or in sanctuaries high in the mountains although for the lack of evidence these are only assumptions. Nevertheless it is know that the Minoans had a strong influence on most of the religious rituals practiced by the Mycenaean.

    The Mycenaean civilization collapsed around 1100 BC. Its final marked the end of the age of bronze in Greece. It was followed by a period of one hundred to one hundred fifty years called ‘dark age’, of which very little is known. When the prehistory ends; it begins the period of recorded history. This fact marks a very important milestone in the development of the evolution of human communities and their awareness as cultural entities.

     

    Woman and Child. Mycenaean statue
    Woman and Child. Mycenaean statue