VII. Greek Archaic Art Colonizing the Mediterranean World DU1701 Periods of Art History I: from Prehistory to Trajan Adrien Palladino, M.A., Ph.D. Centaur of Lefkandi, maybe Cheiron (?), height: 36 cm, end of the 10th century BCE Achaeological Museum, Eretria Pomegranate vase, heigth:10,2 cm, diam. 8,3 cm, terracotta, 8th century BCE Metropolitan Museum, New York Man and centaur, height: 11.10 cm, bronze, mid-8th century BCE Metropolitan Museum, New York Centaur, cast bronze, c. 530 BCE, 11.1 x 3.9 x 11.9 cm Princeton University Art Museum “Master of the Dipylon”, funerary amphora, clay, height: 1,55 m, around 760 BCE National Archaeological Museum, Athens Kylix with sculptor working on a herma, Epictetus painter, c. 520-500 BCE Bronze herm, 9,2 cm, c. 490 BCE Metropolitan Museum, New York Archaic marble herm, from Siphnos, c. 520 BCE National Archaeological Museum, Athens Lady of Auxerre, from Crete (?), limestone, height: 75 cm, c. 640–630 BCE Musée du Louvre, Paris Kleopis and Biton, twin kouroi, attributed to Polymedes of Argos, height: 2,16 m and 2,18 m, c. 580 BCE Archaeological Museum, Delphi Moschophoros (Calf-bearer), excavated at Athens, Acropolis (in 1864), marble, Height: 1,65 (restored), c. 570–560 BCE Acropolis Museum, Athens Left: Statue of Nike, found in Delos, attributed to Achermos of Chios, height: 90 cm, c. 550 BCE National Archaeological Museum, Athens Right: Athenian Kore, from the Acropolis, height: 55 cm, c. 520 BCE Acropolis Museum, Athens Nike marble sculpture, attributed to Antenor, height: 1,13 m, c. 513–500 BCE Archaeological Museum, Delphi Nike, bronze, 8.6 x 8.4 x 2.1 cm, c. 500 BCE Walters Art Museum, Baltimore Peplos kore, Parian marble with traces of polychromy, height: 1,17 m, c. 530 BCE Acropolis Museum, Athens Casts of the Peplos Kore with two versions of restored painted decoration, as Artemis or Athena Acropolis Museum, Athens Berlin goddess, from Attica, female statue with polos and pomegranate, marble, c. 570-560 BCE, H: 1,93 m Antikenmuseum, Berlin Cavalier Rampin, marble, c. 550 BCE Acropolis Museum, Athens Kroisos kouros, c. 530 BCE Archaeological Museum, Athens MET kouros, c. 590–580 BCE Metropolitan Museum, New York Kouros of Tenea, c. 560-560 BCE Archaeological Museum, Athens Piraeus Apollo, c. 530-520 BCE Archaeological Museum of Piraeus Aristokidos kouros, c. 510-500 BCE Archaeological Museum, Athens Kritios Boy, from the Acropolis, Athens, c. 480 BCE Acropolis Museum, Athens Aristokidos kouros, c. 510-500 BCE Archaeological Museum, Athens Chryselephantine (ivory & gold) statue of Apollo (?), c. 550 BCE, from Delphi Archaeological Museum, Delphi Recreation in modern materials of the lost colossal statue by Phidias, Athena Parthenos Nashville Centennial Park “The statue is created with ivory and gold. On the middle of her helmet is likeness of the Sphinx ... and on either side of the helmet are griffins in relief. ... The statue of Athena is upright, with a tunic reaching to the feet, and on her breast the head of Medusa is worked in ivory. She holds a statue of Victory [Nike] that is approx. four cubits high, and in the other hand a spear; at her feet lies a shield and near the spear is a serpent. This serpent would be Erichthonius. On the pedestal is the birth of Pandora in relief” Pausanias, Description of Ancient Greece, 2nd century CE Preserved metopes from the Temple C of Selinunte, Castelvetrano, Sicily, half of the 6th century BCE National Archaeological Museum “Antonio Salinas”, Palermo Medusa, painted terracotta plaque, 56 x 50 cm, from the Athena Sanctuary, Syracuse, c. 575-550 BCE Regional Archaeological Museum Paolo Orsi, Syracuse Antefix with the head of Medusa, terracotta, 6th century BCE, from Tarentino, Southern Italy Metropolitan Museum, New York Antefix with the head of Medusa, terracotta, c. 540 BCE, from Tarentino, Southern Italy Metropolitan Museum, New York Antefix