final essay Flashcards

1
Q

What is the significance of Alexander the Great for Greeks AND Romans?

A
  • Alexander the Great comes directly from Greek history as a Macedonian leader
  • defeated Darius, the king of Persia
  • The rise of Alexander inaugurates the Hellenistic ear
  • crucial figure in Roman culture as he was the forerunner of world conquerors such as Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar
  • model for successive Roman emperors
  • His conquests shaped the world stage not only for the kings and princelings that disputed his territories after his death, but later for the Romans too
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2
Q

How did Alexander the Great influence Roman Pompeii?

A
  • by being a centerpiece for observation in the Alexander Mosaic from the House of the Faun in Pompeii
  • This mosaic of his defeat of King Darius shows how civilized art must continually parade its triumphalism as pathos
  • It is most likely a recreation of some ancient Greek painting
  • it’s resonance is not in its recreation, but in what it represents- a fearless leader nobly going to battle
  • It serves as a consonant reminder of what a world conqueror looks and behaves like.
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3
Q

How did the people of Pompeii adapt Greek paintings?

A

The people of Pompeii often adapted Greek paintings to suit their version of stories or their stylistic desires.

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4
Q

Who is Pliny the Elder and why is he important?

A
  • Pliny the Elder was an active soldier, advocate and historian.
  • His only surviving work, the Natural History is a compilation of 20,000 noteworthy facts into a single universal encyclopedia.
  • outlines a chronology of painting
  • gives a brief account of the achievements of major artists, together with the subjects of their most celebrated work, repeatedly emphasizing those that were to be found in Rome.
  • extremely relevant and important resource for archeologists trying to piece together the history of art from the ancient world.
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5
Q

What was the role of sex, nudity and eroticism in Pompeian art?

A
  • Pompeian art was surprisingly erotic.
  • One could not walk through the streets of Pompeii without seeing an exposed phallic- often times erect.
  • Many of these nude depictions are considered today as pornographic.
  • the role they served in antiquity does not seem to fit this label- otherwise it would not have been such a prominent part of their daily lives.
  • Sex, nudity, and eroticism were common and all we can do is guess what the Roman attitudes were about it.
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6
Q

What are meant by the Pompeian styles of Mau?

A

The four styles articulated by Mau not only classify differing styles, but helped with dating as well.

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7
Q

What are some of the themes used to decorate Pompeian rooms?

A
  • sex, war, divinity, infidelity, incest, adultery, and intoxication
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8
Q

Who was J. J. Winckelmann and why was he important for studying Greek and Roman art and life?

A
  • Winkelmann is almost universally mythologized as the father of art history.
  • He supplied the world with the first basic schema for art history.
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9
Q

What was Winckelmann trying to prove and why was he interested in a sculpture called the Laocoon?

A
  • Winkelmann was trying to prove the chronology of sculptures and categorize them based on stylistic differences.
  • He especially focused on whether they were Greek, Roman, or Roman imitations.
  • The sculpture Laocoon interested him so much because he saw it as a classic representative of his “beautiful” period.
  • He saw it as a good source for the topic of coping with the clash between admiration and horror- admiration of the beauty of the heroism and horror of the realization that we are enjoying but no sharing in the agony of his last moments.
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10
Q

What was the interest of Augustus’ successor as emperor, Tiberius, in Greek sculpture for his cave at Sperlonga?

A

Tiberius made the cave with the art into a cafe and the cave almost caved in. The style and attraction was his idea.

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11
Q

Why did people so want to collect ancient sculpture in the Renaissance and after and who was Charles Townley and why was he important.

A
  • Renaissance is the rebirth or renewal so people were looking to the past.
  • Charles Towny is a famous English art collector.
  • He bought a huge collection of ancient Roman artworks.
  • A lot of the works he bought were subject to fraud or forgery.
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12
Q

How did Roman general Lucius Aemilius Paullus exemplify Rome’s interest in the Greek world?

A

In ancient times he went to an area in Greece and conquered it. He returned to Rome with one of the largest collections of Greek art.

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