Perry, Walter Copland
Greek and Roman sculpture: a popular introduction to the history of Greek and Roman sculpture
— London, 1882
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Preface
Contents
xii
Dibutadcs of Sicyon—His daughter and her lover—Inventions of Dibutades
…
Smilis of jEgina—Endoeus of Athens—Gitiadas of Sparta—His works—
xiv
Pythagoras of Rhegium—His ' Philoctetes'—The Schaffhauscn gem—Im-
…
Calamis—Variety of his subjects and materials—Literary notices from
xv
Cicero, Quintilian, Lucian, Dionysius of Halicarnassus—His Attic grace—
…
Golden age of Plastic art—Pheidias—His teachers, Hegesias and Ageladas—
…
His Panhellenic Zeus—The Zeus of Homer—Plutarch, Paullus /Emilius,
xvi
Cavallo in Rome—Genius of Pheidias—His ideality and sublimity . . 191
…
Western pediment of Temple of Zeus—Pseonius of Mende—His ' Nike on a
xviii
Lycius of Eleutheras —His works—Combat of Achilles and Memnon—Boy
…
Polycleitus of Sicyon—Temple of Here at Argos—His great fame - Statue of
xx
of his genius—His ideality..........414
…
His teachers—Wide-spread fame—His works—The'Apollo Sauroctonos ' in
xxi
Leda and Swan in British Museum—Bryaxis of Athens—His Apollo in
…
Symplegma in Pergamon—' The Wrestlers' in Florence—His Leto, Aphro-
…
his great reputation, his ' Minerva Catuliana'—Leto and her children—The
…
Lysippus—His canon—His works : Colossal Zeus—Eros, &c.—Cupid with
…
at Athens, &c— Style of Lysippus—Lysistratus—His realism—Plaster
List of illustrations
Chapter I
1
word, although the artist must make use of it to express his thoughts.
…
channels by which the artist can convey his meaning to us is, of course,
2
were a creator; and his work is a new creature, not exactly corre-
…
which his genius dictates ; he uses exactly the right tone or form to
5
his highest ambition and his greatest joy, was to be a man in the
…
his innate and unbounded love of beauty. To him the beautiful and
…
Philippus, the Crotonian, on account of his beauty, and sacrificed to
10
the Persians, and Apollo himself defended his temple against the
…
spiritual world, which, though it does not come within his experience
…
'whose going forth is from the end of the heaven, and His circuit
…
that the Christian artist has to do violence to his religion, and to a
Chapter II
18
metropolis, he did not ask the artist to exercise his originality, to
…
be less sacred even in his eyes. Pausanias,2 in speaking of some
19
Daedalus, appears to waver in his opinion.1
…
called a Cretan.3 We are told that he became jealous of' his nephew
…
and a kind of ' fish-glue' (isinglass) are ascribed to him.8 But his chief
…
with a nail in his head.
Chapter III
31
as his influence on the direction of Greek art undoubtedly was, it was
…
his creative genius which prepared for the artist an appropriate field
…
religious notions and aspirations of his countrymen, but Epic poetry
…
vances in his learned and interesting Re-
33
when he received the visit of Thetis in his Olympian palace.
…
as to betray the real character of all his descriptions of the palaces
…
fairy land. Athene with her golden wand,4 Hermes with his ' milk-
38
of his art.
Chapter V
47
moulding in clay—the true plastic art ; although his words 1 need not
…
Dibutades hit upon this invention (opera filiae) ' by the help of his
50
ricatured the deformed poet Hipponax,2 who revenged himself by his
…
the goat-nurse of Zeus. His other works were a statue of Artemis
…
ever strong his antiquarian zeal, the great Emperor is not considered
52
them, holding a bow in his right hand, and with the three Charitcs
…
him as a disciple of Daedalus himself. His chief work was a statue of
Chapter VI
57
We see that the artist is working on his own obser-
…
his faults and failures from those of the Egyptian or Etruscan
63
fact that he is without his lion's skin, which became his constant
…
has a quiver on his back, and the Triton holds something in his left
64
colour. His boots, with the long-curled
…
at that period. On his head he has the hat (kvvt)) of Hermes. Medusa
65
striding with long steps, and yet the soles of both his feet rest flat upon
…
smiles on the spectator as he thrusts his medusa rondanini in munich.
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
84
statue of his countryman, Theognetus, the boy-wrestler.2
…
according to Brunn, from 01. 70-80 (500-460 B.C.).4 Onatas, like his
…
exclusively from Pausanias, who says of him, that although his works
85
was descended from the Sun-god through his grandmother Pasiphae,
…
under his arm, was the joint work of Onatas and his ' pupil or son'
…
But the most remarkable of his works was the bronze figure of
87
seum bearing a stag on his hand.8 There is a avoli.o after
…
should infer that his Apollo was not rigid and angular, like the figures
88
mention of only one work by his hand, one of Three Muses, in the
…
Dcmarchus (who conquered in 01. 65) and his son Thcopompus. It is
89
concerning his date, for, if we were to receive all the notices of him as
…
Of his works, which are very numerous, we know little more than
Chapter IX
105
while he admires his soldier-like quali-
…
2 Aristophanes (Nub. 952) speaks of the says that his tomb was decorated in a similar
106
his best under the limitations of the relief style, the rules of which
…
bottle (\i']kv0os) hanging from his wrist, which
Chapter X
114
decorated of all the thrones in the relief. The arms of his seat are
…
44,/) accompanied (curiously enough on so solemn an occasion) by his
…
robe with sleeves down to the elbows. His long sceptre rests on the
…
his helmet to the god, who receives it with his right hand, while his left
Chapter XI
123
' that he had forgotten his own portion of the work, and could no
…
of the expedition, but, as he is said to have used his bow, he could
127
Achilles (fig. 51, no. 2), who props himself with his right hand, which
…
Ajax, who is holding out his shield for the protection of the wounded
…
supports himself on his bent left leg, while the right knee lightly
128
Thewounded Greek (fig. 51, no. 8) in the corner is lying on his side,
…
himself on his right foot, and stretches his left leg farther behind him,
…
The Wounded Trojan (fig. 51, no. 10) lies more on his back than
130
that the artist is perfect master of his work, that his hand can exe-
…
group as the work of an older artist grown grey in his school—perhaps
Chapter XII
141
indulge his own fancy or that of others, or to multiply a type which
…
formed the basis of a statue of Hcpluzstus, who with his attribute,
142
her beneficence ; Dionysus wearing his leopard's skin ; Hermes; and
…
Pythia refused to answer his questions. The strife between such
143
nude; Heracles with his usual attributes, lion's skin, helmet and bow,
…
who is crowned with laurels, and holds a broom in his hand as
Chapter XIII
151
without which no Pheidias could have arisen—was his gradual emanci-
…
cultivate and freely display his highest powers—I mean the Panhellenic
…
than in the most religious of poets, Pindar, to sing his praises. It
…
it was by bodily prowess that the victor gained his honours, it was in-
152
' the Pindar of plastic art.' It is characteristic of his tendencies that
…
his countrymen at Croton turned his house into a prison, and pulled
…
Another work of his, representing Europa and the Bull, is mcn-
153
than the Greeks ; that, like ' another Ulysses,'6 he had rendered his
…
could mean was that he turned his attention more especially to the
155
latter applies to his still more celebrated contemporary, Myron, whose
…
able to form a more accurate judgment of his style because we have
156
But though he seems to have successfully taken a wider range than his
…
celebrated works of Myron—his Ladas, Discobolus, and the Cow, of
158
numerous works one (the Cow) remained famous down to his own times
…
But the fame of Myron, as we have said, chiefly rests on his power
Chapter XIV
161
more harmony into his art than Polycleitus, and was more careful
…
possess the power of expressing the emotions in the faces of his
163
advantages and powers of his predecessors, and added godlike genius
…
Calamis is nowhere called an Athenian, but he practised his art in
…
cerning him, that the character of his art was more religious than that
…
Capitol at Rome.4 Among his gods was a Hermes Criophoros (ram-
164
Deinomenes, son of Hiero of Syracuse, in honour of his father's
…
eer of his own in a quadriga by Calamis, 'that this artist, so skilful
165
wc can regard with any certainty as his work. Conze,1 indeed, refers
…
and that his style, at all events as com-
…
excelled his predecessors and his contem- hermks criophoros at
…
pressing sensibility in the countenance, and of throwing round his figures
Chapter XVI
174
artist is hidden by the dazzling splendour of his works. But we do
…
collected from far and near to do his bidding ; when a boundless
…
victories of Plataeae and Mycale. We know little or nothing of his
175
he was just entering into life, in the full flush of his country's triumph.
…
begun his career as a painter, and as such to have come into contact
…
administration of Cimon, about the year B.C. 471 ; but his greatest
…
as well as his glory. Like the philosopher Anaxagoras and the
176
his face being cautiously somewhat hidden by his raised arm ;
…
giving in his accounts, began the war ; that Pheidias went into exile
177
preserving it was committed. He was even permitted to carve his
…
art during his administration. But when the once glorious star of
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
191
in years when he carved his own image on the shield of the Athene
…
1 Strabo (viii. ]>. 354) calls him his nephew.
192
Being asked from what model he had formed his Zeus, he replied by
…
' He said, and nodded with his shadowy brows,
193
latter), was seated, as best consisted with his dignity, on a throne of
…
soles of his sandals, and the locks of his hair, were also of gold. The
194
Zeus had risen from his throne he would have carried away the roof.'
…
to Rome, and to substitute his own head for that of Zeus, but was pre-
195
conceived the Gods in his mind and displayed them to men by his
…
' Either the god has come down from Heaven to earth to show his form,
196
in the presence of this image, the man who is overburdened in his mind,
…
of this deity, and some of his reputed sons—Asklepios, Alexander the
197
Phcidias during his sojourn in Olympia we may reckon the Aphrodite
…
of Gods and men, whom Lucretius invokes in his stately lines:
198
but leaves it to his readers to compare the two.'2
…
Olympia of a youth, not Pahtarces, in the act of binding his brows
200
says that ' the wise Pheidias ' was not only known for his images of
…
gained lasting fame for his attention to metre and symmetry ; a
Chapter XIX
204
Alcamenes or the difference between his Aphrodite and that of his
…
with a beard, sitting on a throne, and holding a cup in his hand from
205
his Hceate Epipyrgidia ('upon the tower')—which stood by the Temple
…
his garment, not, as it were, blaming the defect, but gracefully
…
opinions of recent writers that he learned his art in a very different
206
tween QZnomaus, King of Pisa, and Pelops, who by his victory in the
…
with his wife Sterope, daughter of Atlas ; then Myrtihts, the charioteer,
207
It is even said that the great master gave Agoracritus some of his own
…
Zeus of Pheidias, but the God in his sterner, gloomier character, as
208
gusted with the preference given by the partial Athenians to his
…
Pheidias and his school, and the soft, alluring Paphian goddess of a
…
Pausanias 3 mentions an otherwise unknown Pasiteles"1 as his teacher.
Chapter XX
212
of his hand.
Chapter XXI
223
of the great Father of Gods and men, represented in all his majesty
…
together at Pisa his whole host and all the booty,
226
is represented standing with his neck—on which is a cushion—bowed
…
as unwilling to resume his eternal
…
his tremendous task.3
229
Olympia. The poor beast is lying on his side under the heavy foot
…
hero, whose eyes and hair are coloured red,3 leans his head upon his
…
right of the slab. He wears two of his shields on his arms;5 the
…
towards the end of his career.
230
Heracles comes from the left side carrying the boar on his shoulders.
…
of determining. In the sarcophagus at Paris, Heracles sets his foot on
…
torso of the beast (Germ.), the head of Heracles (Fr.), and his leg
232
a helmet, and raising his right arm, which may have held a spear or
…
CEnomaus (fig. 90, i), whose right shoulder is covered by his mantle.
233
traitor Myrtilits (fig. 90,/), sitting on the ground in front of his
…
Pelops, ought not to stand by the side of Zeus with his arm a-
236
Theseus, gained immortal glory for his country and himself. In-
…
tall majestic figure is extending his arm over Hippodameia, as if to
…
who is behind Eurytion, and raises his club
…
with flowers, and holds a branch in his
Chapter XXII
244
his ends by counsel rather than by force; because he is ' tvoikCKo^t^s'
…
She springs from the brain of Zeus, not from his heart or blood ;
249
determined to proceed with the matter at his own expense. After a
…
assistance from his own Government, he took upon himself the
Chapter XXIII
259
people. Poseidon struck the rock with his trident2 and caused a peren-
…
has transgressed his bounds and intruded on to Athene's side, shrinks
262
head of Zeus, which Hephaestus had split open with his axe.1 - We
…
dess on his knee.3 The rough surgical operation itself is singularly
…
sent, probably as central figure with his new-born daughter on one
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
289
figure, nude to the waist, wearing a small chlamys round his loins, and
…
an opposite direction to Hermes, but has just turned his head round
…
from the supposed care with which his drCSS
291
(fig. 117, b) sitting opposite to his twin sister Artemis. One strong
…
male deities, is remarkable for his very nonchalant and extremely un-
…
the first to give him the name of Triptolemos, on the ground of his
…
put a curb on his own fiery impatience. It is hardly conceivable
292
Zeus (fig. 117,^"). Even without the presence of his consort there
…
his loins and legs wrapped in the himation. His left arm rests on his
293
lap, and he supports himself by a staff (jttcvjirTpov ira^i)1 under his
…
flowing hair ; his lower limbs are wrapped in the himation. The
294
limited space at his disposal, to one Goddess and her train.1 This last
…
that for artistic reasons Eros was not placed close to his beautiful
…
dispute his theory. ' It is ill arguing with
Chapter XXVI
303
regions, and by the irresistible power of his lyre moved the stern
…
back at his rescued wife until they had emerged from the Avernian
…
hand upon his shoulder. Orpheus raises his hand to hers, while he
304
looks for the last time on his twice-lost love. It is but for a moment;
…
Yet even he seems for once to perform his task unwillingly!
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
333
in fact we recognise his style even in some of the sculptures of the
…
Although we have no remains or copies of his works, we gather
334
victory.1 On this occasion, probably Lycius had his subject chosen for
…
' worthy of his teacher,'3 and which he mentions again under the
335
and relates a subsequent adventure of his in the time of the Thirty
…
was represented in the act of blowing a fire with his mouth.' Pliny says
…
because we have copies of two of his works—tile Amazon (fig. 148),
336
his dignity as arpar^jos (commander-in-chief of the forces), and not,
…
A Dying Warrior at his last gasp, in whom, says Pliny, ' one may
337
the face of his wounded Amazon justifies the belief that Cresilas at-
…
who also belongs to this group of artists, appears, like his great
339
in technical 'skill' (aocpla). In fact, he carried his attention to the
…
Next to his Candelabra, his principal work seems to have been a
340
Demetrius differed in his tendencies as widely as possible from Poly-
…
was his portrait statue of
Chapter XXIX
345
Though born in Sicyon he was, like his great contemporaries
…
We know very little more of his personal history than that he was
…
which Pliny3 assigns to him probably marks the period of his
…
gathered from the fact that his name is mentioned with that of
353
cleitus, and the one in which his scope and style were most fully
…
less, with a lance in his hand. It is referred to by Ouintilian, who says
…
has left a manual of his art in a work of art!1 Polycleitus is also said
…
to the scheme laid down in his written treatise. Cicero alludes to
354
celebrated for his formation of the breast as Myron for his heads,
…
Wrestler, ' showing his art in the use of his heels ' (' talo inces-
356
pared with those of his Attic predecessors and contemporaries, and
…
art and to the length and slimness which Lysippus gave to his statues.
…
'industry' (finish) and graceful dignity.4 His 'industry' is further
…
form, in an ideal and supernatural development, to embody his
357
proved his work. But Polycleitus regarded the perfect human form—
…
in the prime of life, if, born without blot or blemish, his frame were de-
…
if not excelled, Pheidias in the toreutic art,'2 his chryselephantine
…
the bloom of his youth, or in the combined activity and strength of
…
Much of what we have here said would apply to his older con-
Chapter XXX
359
than a Pheidias. His aims were not the very highest, but he tho-
…
his school, in a very great measure, that his country was indebted for
360
and the Dioscuri were witnesses of his triumph. These, with Adas2
…
each of his captains, and the golden stars of
362
a Hermes. The best known of his other works were Plirixus sacrificing
…
with his quoit in his left hand, col-
…
with his eye, and at the same time
364
in 01. 95 (B.C. 400).4 His other works, of the nature
…
who appears to have been 8 a pupil of his own brother Naucydes.
…
massacre of Bryas and his guard of a thousand men. This general
365
sented the God in his character of patron of friendship. According
…
which is not usually found in the representations of Dionysos.1 His
…
his son to be proclaimed as a Syracusan instead of a Milesian ;
Chapter XXXI
374
know little or nothing of the circumstances of his life, and as no
…
with a statue of Megalopolis on his right hand, and of Artemis
Chapter XXXII
380
life, to reside at Athens, to which place, no doubt, his fame had long
…
Athens. His well-established fame procured him many pupils, among
…
the works of the two artists.2 During his residence at Athens he
382
original and characteristic of his productions, answering in plastic art
…
Down he throws his heavy body in the sacred fawn-skin dressed,
Chapter XXXIII
392
length figure of Dionysus in a long robe, with a goblet in his right hand
…
Flaminian Circus at Rome. There is nothing in his words which enables
…
III. of Pergamon, and used it to adorn his magnificent triumph in 136
Chapter XXXIV
402
at Halicarnassus.1 This able and successful tyrant removed his resi-
…
and conquest until his death in 01. 117. 2 (B.C. 353). Mis widow,
…
have begun to build his own tomb, as was
Chapter XXXV
415
it from Seleucia on the Calycadnus in Cilicia, and displayed it at his
…
tyxedagOgUS) (177, g) busying himself less about his own safety than
421
stopped in his flight to assist her, and is supporting her fainting and
…
same time raises his garment with his left hand, as if apprehensive of
…
(fig. 184). Me is wounded and has fallen on his knees, and is trying
Chapter XXXVI
427
third generation after Alcamenes, and Pliny places his prime in the
…
drew him away from bronze to marble, in which material his greatest
…
his works. The very opposite ma)' be said of Praxiteles. His name
428
and Latin authors vie with one another in singing his praises in the
…
says Propertius.1 Phaedrus 2 declares that artists of his own time en-
…
was a native Athenian citizen, or to the refined sensuality of his
…
Put though Athens was the chief centre of his activity and fame,
…
the extreme north at Parion on the Propontis. His productiveness,
429
GREAT NUMBER OF HIS WORKS. 429
…
the discovery of his ' Hermes and the infant Dionysos' at Olympia,
…
considerable part of his life in Asia Minor, and, amongst other places,
432
escaped by sacrificing his brother. He was subsequently swallowed
…
representing a youthful Apollo with an arrow in his hand, watching a
433
represented, not in his graver and more dignified aspect, as the divine
…
behind a tree, and trying his skill in transfixing the nimble animal by a
434
against a tree, and seeking, boylike, for some easy pastime in his
…
• Slat. 8. as we do; his impatient fancy led him
437
When Phryne asked him which was the most beautiful of his works
…
number of his statues had been destroyed by fire, but not all. On
Chapter XXXVII
442
Solon had to forbid his countrymen to sell their daughters or sisters
…
asking Nicomachus about his domestic affairs, and wc learn that his
444
found his natural field of observation and study in a class of women
…
whom Apelles drew his Venus Anadyomenc, that Praxiteles moulded
446
to the spirit of the period in which he lived, to class his works with
…
and unconscious of, the passion she excites. His aim was not a very
…
had never framed ; and from what we know of his other works we may
…
of Phryne aided him in his work, but his Goddess was no Phrync.
448
tendance on his mother. It is remarkable that no mention is made of
…
of his own love for Phrync, ' drawing the archetype from his own
449
his usual attributes, the bow and quiver, for, according to the epigram,
…
pervade his heart, but whose timid inexperience and self-distrust
Chapter XXXVIII
452
race as the Athenians to the unbounded admiration which his work
…
any fear that his countrymen would fail to recognise the immeasur-
453
parading and immortalising his own intemperate folly. The figures
…
says Pliny,- ' for he placed a charioteer of his own on the quadriga of
…
35. Warrior standing by his Horse1' on a tomb in the Ceramicus
…
sented riding with a lance resting on his
455
ception of the peculiarities of his style, and of the general characteristics
…
the seventeenth chapter of his fifth book, adding that they were all
457
tending his impending departure from Olympia, he seems to have
…
in the very springtide of his beaut}-,2 engaged in a task which makes
…
an, uith the first down on his lip, when youth C
Chapter XXXIX
462
Mausoleum.2 lie is mentioned by Plato (Pseudo-Plato) in his epistles
…
mention of no less than three statues of Zeus by his hand, in which
464
is bearing his prey past the tree from which he had descended; while
…
his dogs, and standing by a lion which he has just slain; a portrait
…
writers suppose that Martial refers to the last group, and compares his
465
was a younger coadjutor of Scopas in Halicarnassus, who chose his sub-
…
of his works was the colossal statue of
467
Among the foremost of these were his sons,
…
Lycurgus the Orator and his sons, Hebron, Lyenrgns and Lycophron?
…
eminent, since Pliny calls him the inheritor of his father's art, and
468
was also his portrait statue of Autolycus, the founder of Sinopc, which
…
The most celebrated of his works are
469
able for his diligence and painful self-criticism, which led him to dash
…
display of his art, for he made a portrait in bronze of
470
and practice of his art. As a painter he belonged to the school of
…
ample, he mentions a picture of his in which a child during the sack-
Chapter XL
Chapter XLI
478
improbable that he should have been actively engaged in his art for
…
account the height of his figures appeared greater. He diligently
…
of his art even in the most trifling wi/u/titc'
479
their literal sense. He did not mould his statues according to any
…
We proceed to speak of such of his numerous works, all in bronze,
…
of the strongest of demigods yielding up his weapons to the wan-
480
invincible hero stripped of his arms by the God of love. But wc
…
Dionysus' type, beautiful and modest, with a lively blush in his
…
by his hand ; viz. a
481
lion's skin was spread. His attitude denotes mingled dejection and
…
downcast hero, and ask him what has become of his club, his quiver,
…
a Herakles of his arms.'7 In the gems in which the same subject is
…
him on his expeditions. It is said to have passed successively through
482
the Tarentine Heracles, the hero is here reclining on his lion's skin at
…
of his own, that it would be unfair to Lysippus to regard it as a re-
483
sippus, and draw away his attention from mythology to the mar-
…
his wont, with his head a little on one side. Alexander, we are told,
484
thrown back like the mane of a lion, as if he had shaken it in his
…
the mighty conqueror would choose to pourtray his great master in a
485
by his ungrateful, but repentant, countrymen immediately after his
…
fabulist as a tribute 'not to his nationality, but his glory.' This
…
difficult problem to solve. He knew nothing of his personality, ex-
…
cripple, who, unable to meet his adversary face to face, has recourse to
486
cunning and finesse; who propounds his doctrines, not by direct
…
sure, both in his life and in his death. He conquered twice at Olym-
487
from Greece, placed it in front of his public baths, and Tiberius
…
nature of his occupation implies a con-
489
admiration. The chief characteristics of his style and scope are found
…
Beauty. His art is less spiritual than that of the former, less aesthetic
…
sionate admiration for female beauty degenerated in his followers
…
to its extreme by his brother Lysistratus. This artist, in his eager-
490
of Melanippe,2 perhaps a noted Hctaira of his time, to whom the term
…
Among the pupils of Lysippus were his three sons, Daippus,3
…
who followed the severer side of his father's art, and
491
The powerful influence of Lysippus is seen in the fact that his
…
school of Lysippus, that several of his statues could scarcely be dis-
Chapter XLII
495
phon, says nothing of the characteristics of his style, we can spare the
…
have stood in no connexion with Peloponnesian art. His works were
…
Spartans, have purposely sought his chief inspiration and instruc-
…
of his works see Pausnn. iv. 31. 6 ; vii. 23. 5 ;
Chapter XLIII
Chapter XLIV
510
was prosecuted for allowing his portrait to be secretly introduced into
…
of Aristotle, and in the hands of Lysippus, who drew his inspira-
…
golden images of his conqueror, Demetrius Poliorcetcs. It is by
…
hailed him and his father Antigonus, not only as kings, but as Gods
511
allowed him to hold his beastly revels in the very innermost chamber
…
Ithyphallic hymn which they addressed to Demetrius, on his en-
513
which claimed his birth. In this heroon was the notorious picture of
…
Gods, but especially to Dionysus, the deity to whom he paid his most
Chapter XLV
519
Aristouidas and his son Mnasitimus, of whom we have an interest-
…
story in which he displays a self-sacrificing loyalty to his sovereign
520
several works by this artist—viz. Apollo, in his temple, with Leto
…
be nude, it is probable that the first, which stood in a group with his
…
work, which stood in his time in the palace of Titus, as ' preferable to
…
of one stone Laocoon himself, his children, and the wonderful folds
523
attack the miserable father, who hurries up too late to defend his
…
myth in one of his lost tragedies, differs from Arctinus in making
524
his head. The chest is thrown forward by the violence of his action,
…
feel that his fate is scaled. He has ceased to struggle, and can only
…
of his transgression ; for he is punished in his own person and that of
525
tries to free himself and his children, squeezes the serpent, and it
…
elder son for his afflicted father brings a soothing element of pathos
…
covered since his day. Unless we bear this fact in mind we shall
…
* See Hrunn's account of his conversation
527
work beside it, his eye involuntarily turned away from it'
…
the second, century B.C. was incorporated into his kingdom by At-
529
his tragedy ' Antiope,' of which some fragments have been preserved.
…
while Lycus had succeeded his brother Nycteus at Thebes, and taken
530
At her right hand is a boy with a syrinx and a garland on his head,
…
Amphion with a sentiment of pity for his victim. Dircc, they say,
Chapter XLVI
534
sovereigns like Alexander and his successors plastic art was chiefly
…
tions of Arsinoe, the wife of his patron, than from deliberate
535
alone refused submission, and in a battle near his capital gained a
…
glories of his triumph in Athens, the once hallowed centre of Greek
537
His statue of Priapus is referred to in an epigram of Apollonius.'2
…
memoration of his signal victory over the Gauls. Prof. Brunn of Munich,
538
No. I (fig. 218) represents a beautiful youth, in the flow er of his
…
hexagonal shield, and the girdle or rope of w ire round his naked body,
…
by his adversary. Though
540
count of the form of his
…
for a Gaul. His life is
…
alone can wrest from his grasp. By his side lies his girdle, which,
541
wound in his thigh, from which the blood is flowing.
…
but his complete nudity hardly suits the oriental character. He, too,
542
He is without weapons, and his right arm is raised rather in depreca-
…
Jp-y^Jp prostrate on his shield, like No. 1,
…
I V^^C^T \ t'lc barbarian in his ideal face and
543
been succeeded by his son Eumenes II. The latter, who had in-
…
warded for his important services, and obtained from the grateful
…
to pay him 359 talents for his war expenses, and 127 talents in lieu of
…
Eumenes II. was now at the summit of his power and prosperity,
…
acquired in attracting artists and men of letters to his court, and ren-
…
the city, and planted the grove of Xikephorion, and out of his love of
544
some knowledge of Greek art in the cast-museums of his country.
…
communicated his discovery to the proper authorities at Berlin, and
550
shaking the dread aegis in his raised right hand. On his right is
…
has fixed his iron claws. The remains of a magnificent Quadriga
552
vigorously seconded by her dog, who is fixing his great fangs into
…
hastening to the assistance of his older comrade, on whom Artemis
553
of his wings are also interspersed.
…
in his left hand, and swings a torch in his right. The progress
…
in accordance with the insane presumption of Alexander and his suc-
…
in his claws a thunderbolt bound with sacred fillets. Her weapon is
554
carries- his attribute, the hammer, which he is aiming at the most
…
a Giant who has fallen on one knee. She seizes his shield with
…
his left. If so, Heracles must have been represented in another part
Chapter XLVII
559
ground, as the life-blood flows from the deep wound in his manly
…
despair are in his swimming eyes. He has had time not only to kill
560
had been enacted before his own eyes, and to endow his work with
…
the noble Gaul allowed to grow on his face.
…
very torrent, tempest, and whirlwind of his passion, acquires and
…
pest of his passions his whole being suffers shipwreck.
561
THE GAUL KILLING HIS WIFE. 561
…
slain his wife, and with upraised hand is driving the deadly steel
…
vigorous warrior standing at bay before the foe, with his dark defiant
…
THB GAUL KILLING HIS WIFE.
Chapter XLVIII
570
was vowed by Aulus Postumius in his battle with the Latins, A.U.C.
…
latter is victorious, and appears in the act of binding his adversary to
572
of Pydna (186 B.C.), transported his rich booty of paintings and
…
dered. The Emperors followed suit, and Augustus turned his atten-
573
out success, to remove the chryselephantine statue of Zeus from his
…
which he adorned his Golden House at Rome. Delphi alone is
…
us the acts of violence and meanness into which his mad passion for
574
for his task of universal conqueror, was somewhat softened by the
…
the most trivial suggestion of a playful fancy—from Zeus with his
…
which he carried in his bosom and took out
…
Davtis ridicules Horace for his love of
Chapter XLIX
584
his restoration on the famous Florentine gem called Teucer,2 in which
…
hero as seated alone, enjoying the repose to which his long career of
…
become immortal, he obtains the right to take his seat among the
…
' The hero,' he says, 'after allowing his head to rest for a time on this
585
an epithet or simile sublime or beautiful enough to express his un-
…
Hebe, the goddess of eternal youth. . . . His body is fed by no mortal
…
cxtremest boundaries of his toils, to the monuments and pillars which
587
his inspiration from that lovely darling of the Grecian world. The
…
fied the type created by Praxiteles as to give his
…
Venus whom his fathers worshipped retains in his eyes nothing of her
…
and the temper of the age rendered them quite unnecessary. His
591
complishment of the most arduous of his la-
…
He stands leaning heavily on his club, and
…
swollen by his superhuman efforts, and the whole attitude of the
…
which earlier art is accustomed to invest its Demigods. Even his
592
improve upon his model, and to surpass his master. Even Lysippus
…
weight of the world on his massive shoulders, he also outran the
Chapter L
605
each of whom bore an Eros on his
…
Centaur (fig. 246) bears his burden
…
sence of the little tyrant on his
…
torious air, arc restored ; the Bacchic wreath on his head seems to
Chapter LI
612
escaped destruction. The artist has based his work entirely on the
…
groves, graced by the presence of Apollo; for his image seems
613
time sensitive, sympathetic, and instructed. And if his eulogy—for
…
that if he had seen the full and perfect exemplification of his own
614
before Troy who had dishonoured his holy prophet.1 These inter-
…
his physician Dr. Frank. After passing through several hands, it
616
his temple in supernatural youthful beauty, and the White Maidens
…
came by the regis, which is not his proper attribute ? There is a pre-
Chapter LII
622
PASITELES AND HIS SCHOOL.
…
the high estimation in which he was held. His contemporary, the
…
Varro something of the manner in which he exercised his art.
…
It is evident from the favourable testimony of his contemporaries
…
the wisdom to recognise the incapacity of his generation for original
623
one of his chief characteristics is attested by "<0^i
…
sion that they are productions of his pupils
624
624 PASITELES AND HIS SCHOOL.
…
The connexion of the foregoing with Pasiteles or his school is
…
ness and novelty to his w ork. All the more prominent character-
…
and now at Naples.2 In all of them ' Orestes ' is represented with his
628
628 PAS/TELES AND HIS SCHOOL.
…
the excellence of his clay models, for which, we are told, he received a
…
Of his Venus Genetrix we have copies both in statuary3 and on
629
soothing it by the strains of his lyre. Such plastic representations are
…
Great. These were set up round his theatre at Rome, and gave rise
Chapter LIII
637
art to prolong the memory of his w arlike exploits. We cannot, in-
…
of the Curia Hostilia a picture of his victorious engagement in Sicily
639
to his statue is the glorification of the Emperor Trajan. Not
…
encouraging his troops and leading them to the fight—sitting in judg-
642
and Pillar to this Emperor after his death. The former, of which re-
…
Emperor and his sons Caracalla and Gcta, in honour of his victories
Chapter LIV
645
* higaleia, who was crowned after his death, and whose statue was
…
sreat conqueror, and of his generals, but it became common to
649
sented in a helmet, in his character of a-paTyyos, and not, as some
…
It docs not represent the Dionysiac side of his character, but the
…
vigour, with his advanced foot on a helmet, pressing forward sword
651
Romulus set up his own statue crowned by Victor}' on a Quadriga
…
the Pal. Casali at Rome. Of his destroyer, 'Junius Brutus, there is a
…
Miebuhr and his wife, at Honn, by order of the late King of Prussia.
653
an Imperator haranguing his troops, was discovered in 1863, in a
…
which owes but little to the insignia of his
…
Round his loins a mantle is loosely wrapped, both ends of which meet
Chapter LV
660
ported in his letter to the Senate, but in all probability by an act of
…
seemed to his fears the greater in his eyes was the merit of Antinous,
…
Temples were erected for his worship both in Egypt and Greece ;
…
Scn.-ite, c. 2, or in his life, Spnrtian. c. 16)
663
Winckelmann1 is loud in his piaises of this beautiful bust, and
…
respect, that it represents Antinous in his own character and not, as
Index
675
Acttron and his dogs, relief of, 68 f
…
classic notices of, ib. ; his works : —Athene
…
Alcamenes, pupil of 1'heidias, his art contest
…
ing the Temple of Zeus at Olympia, ib ; his
676
Apelles for his sculptor and painter, 478 « ;
…
tronage of his successors, 512; his funcralcar,
…
AlmaTadema, M., his Painter's Model, 623 «
…
Anaxagoras {cire. B.C. 430), his statue of Zeus,
…
Antenor of Athens (cire. B.C. 500), his statues
…
Minerva by, 580 ; his Pallas, in the Villa
…
ing his fall, 536 n ; makes a present of the
…
Apelles, draws his Venus Anadyomcne from
677
ventor of statues, 19 n • on his statue of
…
his name inscrilied on the Torso Bekcdere of
…
Aicesilaus of Paros, Simonides' praise of his
…
his Apotheosis of Homer, dodff. See
…
Argus of Argos (mythic period), 21 ; his statue
…
Aristocles of Athens (circ. B.C. 460), 95 ; his
678
tant of Hypatodorns in his Seven against
…
Arrian, his account of the tomb of Cyrus, 112«
…
Dxdalus and his works, i%ff\ pre-IIomeric,
…
ander and his successors, 509 ff, 673;
680
Bathycles of Magnesia {fire. 540 B.C.), his
…
Bcnndorf, Prof., his theory as to Myron's
…
Boethos of Chalcedon, 563 /; his statues of
…
monument, 116; his arrangement of the
681
^ Calamis, dat e and character of his art, 162,
…
notices of, it. ; his candelabra for the
…
576 ; his Evatine, it.
…
Truven, mentioned as his, S3 ; style hard
…
Cedrenus, his notice of an aichaic statue of
…
ZUff; his Eircne and infant Plntus, 375/
682
buildings of, ib. ; monument to his horse in
…
Conze, Prof., his interpretation of the Harpy,
…
Coponius (temp. Pompey), his statues of four-
…
335 it; his competition with Pheidias and
…
of Diitrephes, 337 ; his 'Mounded Amazon,
…
his exploration of Olympia, 224
683
scribed to, 19 ; his improvements in sculp-
…
among his works—a trophy for the Eleans,
…
pian Zeus, 194, 494; character of his works,
…
of, 340/; classic notices of, ib. ; his Lysi-
…
Derby, Lord, citations from his translation of
684
copies of his works, ib. ; his Caryatid, 593 ;
…
and opinions on his proceeding, 249/, 253 ;
…
primitive character of his works, 94/
…
Ennenei 11. of Pergaxnoxi, his victory over
685
471 ; his chief works -.—Athlnl (Minerva
…
to represent his style, 472 ; his striving after
…
Eutychides, pupil of Lysippus, 491 ; his Tyche
…
Ealkcner, Mr., his reconstruction of the
…
Flaminius, despoils Philip of Macedon of his
…
Gaul killing his wife (Villa Ludovisi), 616
686
Guglielmo della Porta, his restoration of the
…
135 ; his affection for Anlinous, 659 ; grief
…
Helios on his chariot (Parthenon), 263
…
Hepluestus, his fabled shield of Achilles and
687
with him by Alexander on his expeditions,
…
Herodotus, the religious sentiment in his His-
…
and Athennis, 50 ; his revenge, ib.
…
II;;; his conception of Hades, 12;;; on
…
his gods, 32 ; his description of the palace
688
JAHN, O., his interpretation of the Orestes
…
Lange, Dr. Conrad, his arrangement of the
…
Lenormant, M., his discovery of a copy of the
…
Plato's and Pliny's notices of, 462 ; his
…
lines of Sadoletus from his Laocoon, 524;; ;
…
Libanius, his panegyric of {he Apollo in Daphne,
…
Mausoleum of Ilalicarnassus, 404; his de-
…
Lucretius, his invocation of Venus, 197
689
Myron, 333 ; among his works were :—
…
Lysander, artistic celebration of his victory at
…
his relation to Alexander the Great, 47S,
…
works of, 488 ; his style, 488/; school of,
…
workmanship of, 4S9 f; his statue of Alc-
…
.Marcus Cossutius Cerdo, his statues of Satyrs
…
]>eriod), his Orestes and Plectra, 625/. Sec
690
Messala, Valerius Max., picture of his battle
…
the Gian', 67/; Aetieon and his dogs, 68 f;
…
Michelangelo, his attempt to repair the Lao-
…
Athene and Satyr, 155 ; his interpretation
…
to, 160; his style, 161 /, 200; opinions of
…
Mys, his bittle of the Centaurs on the shield of
692
his Chariot-race between Oinomaus and
…
42, 175, 191 ; his pictures of //ellas and
…
l'asiteles and his school (circ. 89 B.C.), 622 ff;
…
Sipylus, 29 ; his account of the chest of
…
of Rhcgium, 52/; his account of Smilis of
693
Onatas and his works, 84/"; on the works
…
Olympia, 225 n ; his account of its sculp-
…
Satyr and other works, 436 f 454 /; his
…
his wealth in adorning his capital, ib. ;
…
his -wife, 560 /; The Knife-sharpener (Flo-
…
203 f; probable date of his birth, 174; his
…
his studio at Olympia, 177; patronage
…
183 h; imitations, 185^'; presents his own
694
minor works of, 199 f; character of his
…
his Amazon in the Vatican, 350, 351 «;
…
Philip of Macedon, despoiled of his art
…
his beauty, 5
…
Phyromachus of Pergamon, 537 ; his statue
…
Pliny, notices of art and artists by :—his
…
and of Polycles of Athens, 376; his account
…
by Praxiteles, 452 /; his Charioteer, 453 ;
695
Plutarch, his description of the Dclian Apollo
…
1'olycleitus I. of Sicyon (circ. li.c. 482), his
…
346, 356/"; his statue of Here in the Ileraion
…
his specialty—the Diatlumenos, 352; the
…
Myron, 357 ; his skill as an architect, 35S ;
…
Polycles 1. of Athens {eire. B.C. 372), his por-
…
Aphrodite Urania of l'heidias, 197; his de-
696
standing by his horse, 453; works in the
…
examples, 456 ; chararteristics of his style,
…
Pullan, Mr., his restored view of the Mauso-
…
his chief works :—Apollo in contest With the
…
racter and style of his work, 153, 20O
697
Ross, Mr., his arl discoveries in Rhodes, 51S/
…
Schliemann, Dr., his discoveries at Mycenae
…
' Scipio, Lucius, picture of his victory over An-
…
Hecate and Heracles, 380 ; his residence at
…
supposed copies of, 396 ff; his work at the
…
Praxiteles, 429 ; his Aphrodite removed to
698
artist, 341 ; his Hermes Propulaics, 342 ;
…
of acro'y, cKTai/xa, 45 ;;; his discovery at
…
Torso of Heracles, 584 ; his theory as to the
…
notice of the Olympian Zeus, 194; his
THE SCHOOL OF MYRON.
333
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE SCHOOL OF MYRON.
UNRIVALLED and predominant as were the genius and influence of
Pheidias in Athens, and, in a less degree, throughout Greece, we shall
not be surprised to find at the same period traces of other schools of
a different character, and with somewhat different aims. So really
great and prolific an artist as Myron, whose works were, by the very
nature of their subjects, peculiarly calculated to attract the public
eye, could not be without enthusiastic followers and imitators. And
in fact we recognise his style even in some of the sculptures of the
Parthenon itself. Among the best known members of his school is
Lycius of ElEUTHER/E,
About Ol. 90 (B.C. 420),
who is sometimes called the son,1 and sometimes only the pupil,2 of
Myron.
Although we have no remains or copies of his works, we gather
from descriptions of them that he followed in the footsteps of his
preceptor. His chief work was a group of thirteen figures in bronze,
representing the single combat between the Dis geniti Acliillcs and
Memtton* in the treatment of which the sculptor probably fol-
lowed the yEthiopis of Arctinus.4 Near the Hippodamcion, in
1 Pausan. i. 23. 7. Allien, xi. p. 486, D.
2 Plin. N. //. xxxiv. 79.
s Pindar, 01. ii. 83 (ed. Dyssen), and
AV//;. iii. 63, vi. 52. Conf. the same scene
depicted on the fine ' red on black ' crater
in the lirit. Mus. (Table-case I, No. 121).
4 Conf. Welcker, Ep. Cyd. i. 212 and ii.
169.
333
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE SCHOOL OF MYRON.
UNRIVALLED and predominant as were the genius and influence of
Pheidias in Athens, and, in a less degree, throughout Greece, we shall
not be surprised to find at the same period traces of other schools of
a different character, and with somewhat different aims. So really
great and prolific an artist as Myron, whose works were, by the very
nature of their subjects, peculiarly calculated to attract the public
eye, could not be without enthusiastic followers and imitators. And
in fact we recognise his style even in some of the sculptures of the
Parthenon itself. Among the best known members of his school is
Lycius of ElEUTHER/E,
About Ol. 90 (B.C. 420),
who is sometimes called the son,1 and sometimes only the pupil,2 of
Myron.
Although we have no remains or copies of his works, we gather
from descriptions of them that he followed in the footsteps of his
preceptor. His chief work was a group of thirteen figures in bronze,
representing the single combat between the Dis geniti Acliillcs and
Memtton* in the treatment of which the sculptor probably fol-
lowed the yEthiopis of Arctinus.4 Near the Hippodamcion, in
1 Pausan. i. 23. 7. Allien, xi. p. 486, D.
2 Plin. N. //. xxxiv. 79.
s Pindar, 01. ii. 83 (ed. Dyssen), and
AV//;. iii. 63, vi. 52. Conf. the same scene
depicted on the fine ' red on black ' crater
in the lirit. Mus. (Table-case I, No. 121).
4 Conf. Welcker, Ep. Cyd. i. 212 and ii.
169.