Phidias

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    Ancient Greece Greece is an important ancient civilization that is still alive today. Greece is an amazing country with amazing culture . Greece has a rich and interesting history. At various times in its history Greece included all of Epirus, Macedonia, and Thrace, part of Asia Minor, and Magna Graecia. Archaeological remains show that Greece had a long prehistory, dating from the Neolithic Age (c.4000 B.C.). By the Bronze Age (c.2800 B.C.) important cultures had developed. The Aegean civilization

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    It is no surprise Greek goddesses have been depicted in art since the beginning of Greek mythology. It is believed the mythology was fully developed sometime around 700 BCE, meaning the myths have existed for over three thousand years. The nearby Romans found Greek culture appealing and absorbed many of their traditions, including the Greeks’ mythological ideas. In Roman mythology, however, some of the gods and goddesses have different names but are otherwise essentially the same. The goddess of

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    The life of Greeks was dominated my religion. This explains why Greek temples were the most beautiful, and largest type of architecture. The temples served for a political purpose, as they were built to honour civic power and pride. Another purpose of the temples is to praise the patron diety of a city for their success in war. The temples in Greece vary under three main divisions of architectural type. These divisions, or systems, are called orders. The first order of temples is called Doric. Doric

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    Human Body Art

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    with the goddess. The purpose of this piece of art was to serve as an Amazon for the temple of Artemis. The most popular artists of that time from Greece competed in making of a statue of an Amazon. These artists included Kresilas, Polykleitos, and Phidias. In a cultural context, the Amazons used to wear a dress with one breast open to enable the warrior woman to use her bow with greater flexibility, and the Statue of Wounded Amazon depicted with the breast, which has not been covered by the piece of

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    The Movie ' Hercules '

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    For decades the corporation, Disney, has made extraordinary films. Although, the history and cultures involved in the movies aren’t always depicted accurately. An example of this would be comparing the depiction of ancient Greece in Disney’s movie, Hercules. “The Disney version is pretty much a superman story – a person is born with extraordinary talents that isolate him, and he spends his life trying to fit in, only to find that he has done so incidentally.” (Disneyfied.) This animated film was

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    artifacts could be found in the ruins of the city, Greece, or in the ruins of mythological stories’. Most of these artifacts are sacred, and have special powers, or they are built/made to worship or celebrate something. The “Athena Parthenos” sculpted by Phidias was a great example of a mythological Greek artifact. The statue was built to represent the people’s tribute to the gods and goddesses of Greece. This artifact shows, cultural identity among the people and the religion. Every so often, people built

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    Neoclassicism, meaning new classicism, was the philosophy of the French Revolution. Since the fall of the Roman Empire, Europeans had been fascinated by the glory and affluence of ancient Rome. However, it was during the Age of Enlightenment around the mid-1700’s that many students went to study art in Rome and returned to their home countries with a renewed appreciation for Greco-Roman culture. A popular neoclassical writer named Johann Joachim Winckelmann once said this, “the only way for modern

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    Over the recent years, screen-based contents have drastically taken up the attention of those who live in the era built upon electronics. Books have converted to eBook, class printouts to pdf files, and stories to films. Greek mythology is not an exceptions, in fact, they are one of the most common characters to be found in various media platforms. Inspired by the original myth, many content producers have modified what is once traditional. From storylines to characters, creative individuals have

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    art that was described as modern; Hitler was known to describe it as Jewish or communist in nature. Hitler pushed the classical art ideal, in which the only type of art allowed to be showcased in museums were classical pieces from artists such as Phidias and Picasso (Campbell 1). As the German regime began to gain wealth and power, the Nazis were ordered to begin to contact art

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    Elgin Marbles

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    The Elgin Marbles emulate a struggle of nations to come to agreeance over cultural heritage that idolizes the context of visual sculptures. In the possession of the Britons, the Marbles reach a larger demographic with the aim of the British Museum in educating for the public benefit. Thus, if not removed from the Parthenon in the early 1800’s, further destruction to the priceless works of art would have occurred. Although the marbles hold an imperial stigma in the British possession, the creation

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