AP Art History
AP Art History
Aegean Art
INTRODUCTION

The three civilzations that flourished 5000-3000 years ago
were the direct forerunners of the first true European civilization of Greece.
Geographically,the Cycladic Islands, the Island of Crete and the region of
Mycenae (on mainland Greece) comprise the region of the Aegean.
Populations first settled in the region during the lower paleolithic and
established
village life during the early neolithic.
The region reached its peak during the 2nd millenium BCE.
The three cultures were dominated by the sea, that allowed them to develop
with a wealthy trade economy, and acted as a natural defense
against their enemies.
CHRONOLOGY
Cycladic (Cyclades Islands) 3000-1600 BCE
Minoan (Crete) 3000-1400 BCE
Mycenean 1400-1100 BCE
Cycladic Art

Sculpture-Most examples date from the neolithic period and are female.
Seated Man With Harp (fig.4-3), 3rd.millenium BCE
Statuette of a Woman (fig.4-2), c2500-2000 BCE
Minoan Art

The people of the Minoan civilzation flourished on the island
of Crete. They established a wealthy network of trade that enabled them
to be economically self-sufficient. Minoans reached their peak c1600 BCE.
Much of what we know about the Minoan culture is due to the archaeological work of Sir Arthur Evans.
Architecture-primary examples were built at the Temple Complex at
Knossos.
Palace of Knossos (figs.4-4 & 4-5), c1700-1400 BCE
Queen's Megaron, Palace of Knossos, c1700-1400 BCE
King's Apartment, Inner Court with peristyle, Palace of Knossos
c1700-1400 BCE
Painting-artists worked on a large scale using the fresco technique.
Typically, murals were views of nature and/or
scenes of human activity and had painted geometric
borders.
Toreador Fresco (Bull Jumping) Palace of Knossos (fig. 4-16), 1450-1400 BCE
Landscape with Swallows (Spring Fresco) Thera (presently Santorini)
(fig. 4-18), c1630-1500 BCE
Sculpture-were primarily small religious subjects made in ivory, wood, precious
metals and stone.
Snake Goddess Palace of Knossos (fig.4-7), c1600 BCE
Rhyton Palace of Knossos (fig. 4-10), c1500-1450 BCE
Mycenaean Art

The site of the ancient Mycenaean civilization was discovered
in the late 19th century by archaeologist Heinrich Schleimann.
The people of the Mycenaean culture were influenced by the Minoans.
But unlike the peaceful Minoans, the culture of the
Mycenaeans was dominated by military encounters and the building
of fortifications and strongholds.
Architecture
Corbeled Gallery Citadel at Tiryns (figs. 4-23 & 4-24), c1400-1200 BCE
Lion Gate, Mycenae, (fig. 4-20), c1300-1250 BCE
Treasury of Atreus, Mycenae (figs.4-21 & 4-22), c1300-1250 BCE
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