Egyptian art: frontalism β head profile, torso frontal, legs profile. Size = status. Hierarchic scale.
Egyptian Art Conventions
Why Egyptian figures look the way they do β the rules that governed 3,000 years of art
Composite view: head in profile, eye frontal, shoulders frontal, legs in profile β shows each body part in most recognizable view (not as seen from one point). Hierarchic scale: most important figures shown largest (pharaoh > nobles > servants > enemies). Color conventions: men = red-brown skin, women = yellow, gods = gold. Register lines: horizontal bands organize narrative. Canon of proportions: 18-square grid for standing figure. Purpose: eternal record, not naturalistic snapshot. These conventions remained stable for 3,000 years β a deliberate choice, not limitation.
The supreme achievement of Classical Greek architecture β and its visual tricks
Architects: Iktinos and Kallikrates. Sculpture program: Phidias. Doric order β but with Ionic frieze (continuous) inside colonnade. Optical refinements: stylobate (floor) curves upward slightly, columns tilt inward, corner columns slightly thicker β corrects optical illusions of straight lines appearing to sag or lean. Chryselephantine (gold + ivory) cult statue of Athena: 12 m tall, lost. Elgin Marbles: frieze removed by Lord Elgin (1801β1812), now in British Museum β ownership dispute ongoing. Parthenon: 'virgin's chamber' in Greek.
How Rome absorbed Greek art and transformed it β inventing the commemorative portrait and concrete architecture
Portraiture: verism β wrinkles, warts, individuality (vs Greek idealization) β Republican tradition of ancestor masks. Later: imperial portraits project ideal authority (Augustus of Primaporta β contrapposto + idealization). Architecture: arch + barrel vault + groin vault + dome (Pantheon) + concrete (opus incertum, opus reticulatum). Pantheon (118β128 CE): coffered concrete dome (43 m diameter, still largest unreinforced concrete dome), oculus. Historical reliefs: Arch of Titus, Column of Trajan (120 m of continuous narrative). Mosaics: floors and walls. Roman copies: most knowledge of Greek bronze originals through Roman marble copies.
Mesopotamian Art
Mesopotamian art: ziggurat temples, cuneiform, stele, guardian figures (lamassu). Stele of Hammurabi = law code.
Mesopotamian Art
Art of the world's first cities β Sumer, Akkad, Babylon, Assyria
Sumer (3000β2000 BCE): first cities, ziggurats (stepped temple towers β Ur), cylinder seals, votive statues with enormous eyes (dedicated worship). Standard of Ur: inlaid shell panel showing war and peace. Akkadian: Stele of Naram-Sin β diagonal composition, first landscape in art. Babylonian: Stele of Hammurabi (1754 BCE) β sun god Shamash dictates laws to king; 282 laws carved below. Assyrian (900β600 BCE): palace reliefs β lion hunts, military campaigns, enormous detail. Lamassu: human-headed winged bull guardians at palace gates. Ishtar Gate: glazed brick, lapis lazuli blue.
Cave Paintings
Lascaux (~17,000 BCE), Chauvet (~36,000 BCE): earliest known art. Animals, handprints, rarely humans. Ritual or cognitive revolution?
Prehistoric Cave Art
The oldest art in the world β what it tells us about early human cognition
Chauvet Cave (France, ~36,000 BCE): oldest dated paintings β rhinos, mammoths, horses, perspective (overlapping), shading. Altamira (Spain, ~15,000 BCE): bison, ceiling paintings. Lascaux (France, ~17,000 BCE): 'Sistine Chapel of prehistory' β Hall of the Bulls. Characteristics: mostly animals (not landscapes), rare human figures, handprints (negative and positive). Pigments: ochre, charcoal, manganese dioxide. Interpretation: hunting magic, shamanic visions, mapping territory, pure aesthetic pleasure β debated. Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2011): 3D documentary.
Byzantine Art
Byzantine art: gold backgrounds, frontal figures, hierarchic scale, no shadows β not illusion but spiritual presence.
Byzantine Art
How Early Christian ideology transformed classical naturalism into otherworldly icon
Eastern Roman Empire, 330β1453 CE. Rejection of classical illusionism β not ignorance but theology: art shows eternal spiritual truth, not earthly illusion. Gold backgrounds: heavenly realm, timelessness. Frontal poses: direct address to viewer. Hierarchic scale: spiritual importance not physical size. Elongated figures, large eyes. Icons: sacred images β iconoclasm controversy (726β843 CE) β are images idolatry? Second Council of Nicaea (787) restored icons. Hagia Sophia (532β537 CE): dome appears to float (40 windows). Ravenna mosaics: Justinian and Theodora β imperial, hieratic.
From fortress-like Romanesque to soaring Gothic β how theology shaped architecture
Romanesque (1000β1200 CE): heavy, fortress-like churches. Thick walls (no flying buttresses) β small windows β dark interiors. Round arch. Barrel vault. Tympanum sculptures at portals (Last Judgment β Autun Cathedral). Pilgrimage routes developed Romanesque across Europe. Gothic (1140β1400 CE): Abbot Suger at Saint-Denis β lux nova (new light). Pointed arch + ribbed vault + flying buttress β walls become screens for stained glass. Chartres Cathedral: portal sculpture, rose windows. Illuminated manuscripts: Book of Kells, Hours of Jeanne d'Evreux. International Gothic: elegant, courtly figures.
African Art
African art: functional and sacred β masks for ritual, not display. Ife bronzes (naturalistic), Benin bronzes, Kuba textiles.
African Art
The diversity and sophistication of African visual traditions β and their impact on modern art
Ife (Nigeria, 12thβ15th c.): terracotta and bronze portrait heads β remarkable naturalism. Benin Kingdom: bronze plaques and portrait heads commemorating oba (king). Masks: not decorative objects but activators β worn in ritual performance, embody spirits. Kuba Kingdom (Congo): intricate geometric textiles, wooden cups. Nok terracottas (Nigeria, 500 BCEβ200 CE): earliest sub-Saharan sculpture. Influence on Western modernism: Picasso, Matisse, Brancusi saw African art in Paris ethnography museums ~1905 β inspired formal innovations (Cubism). Problem: 'tribal art' framing strips cultural context.
Why Egyptian architecture is all about permanent, eternal presence β and how it achieves it
Pyramid form: Old Kingdom (2700β2200 BCE). Step Pyramid of Djoser (Imhotep, ~2650 BCE) β first stone building in history. Great Pyramid of Giza (~2560 BCE): 146m, 2.3 million blocks, aligned to cardinal directions within 0.05Β°. Temple architecture: pylon (monumental gateway) β open courtyard β hypostyle hall (forest of columns) β sanctuary (darkest, most sacred). Hypostyle Hall at Karnak: 134 columns, 24 m tall. Obelisk: tapered monolith symbolizing sun ray, gilded tip. Colossal statues: Abu Simbel, twin temples of Ramesses II β four 20m seated statues.
Indian and Asian Art
Buddhist art: stupa (reliquary mound) β image of Buddha (Gandhara, Mathura). Hindu temple = mountain of the gods.
Indian and Asian Art
The visual traditions of Asia β from Buddhist stupas to Hindu temples to Chinese painting
Buddhist art: early β no Buddha images (footprints, wheel, Bodhi tree as symbols). Gandhara (NW Pakistan, 1stβ3rd c. CE): Greek influence β first Buddha images (Greco-Roman features). Mathura: indigenous Indian style. Stupa: reliquary mound (Sanchi stupa, 3rd c. BCE). Ajanta caves: painted murals. Hindu temple: shikhara tower = Mount Meru (cosmic mountain). Angkor Wat: Hindu then Buddhist temple complex (12th c., Cambodia). Chinese painting: landscape (shan shui), ink wash, poetry/painting/calligraphy as unity. Japanese: wabi-sabi, Zen gardens, woodblock prints (Ukiyo-e β Hokusai, Hiroshige).