CHAPTER
XVII.
GREEK
ART AND ARCHITECTURE
I.
CLASSICAL
SCULPTURE: (II) THE FOURTH CENTURY
THE sculpture
of the fifth century could be divided into three periods or four. In the fourth
century also, one may speak of three periods: the early years; the time of
Praxiteles and Scopas; and the time of Lysippus. But the bounding-lines are
more indeterminate: the first phase is partly reaction from the art of the late
fifth century, partly preparation for the second phase; and the second phase is
not really superseded by the third, but passes into it, subsists side by side
with it, and helps it to engender Hellenistic art. The ancients made the break
at Lysippus, and so shall we: the first two phases will be considered together,
the third by itself.
We begin as
before with the naked male; and with what is for us the most important monument
of fourth-century art, the Hermes of Praxiteles. That carries us at once to the
middle of the century or even a little past it: but standing there we can look
back and see what changes have taken place; and we shall have an opportunity of
retracing our steps. The motive, a young god playing with a child, is a
light-hearted one. The attitude is one of those easy leaning postures which
first appeared in sculpture about the thirties of the fifth century and which
are great favourites in the fourth. The build of the figure is lighter than in
the fifth century, but there is no touch of effeminate softness in the body,
which is beautifully developed. In the head the features are smaller and finer,
the bones of the skull, one would say, thinner. Body and face are not mapped
out into big clearly- demarcated areas, as they still are even in the late
fifth century: the areas are somewhat smaller, though not unduly small, and
they slip and play into each other. With this difference goes another
difference. Compare the Hermes with a fifth-century original: the fifth-century
flesh seems made of some neutral substance, the flesh of the Hermes of muscle
and fat: it has not only the surface bloom and sheen of life, but the warm
lifted swell of a living organism. If body and face are less patternized than before, drapery and hair are still less.
The Hermes is
an original from the chisel of the great Athenian; there are no copies of it,
and how much of its high-bred grace, subtle modelling, and gentle turns of head
and body would survive in an ordinary copy? Speaking generally, fourth-century
works suffer more than fifth-century at the copyist’s hands. The strong and
simpler wine of the fifth century travels: the fourth reaches us now dulcified
now fortified, and nearly always robbed of its quintessence.
Other
Praxitelean males have come down to us in copies. The boy satyr pouring wine,
part of a group, is an early work and comparatively insignificant. The boy
Apollo, like the Hermes, leans, and the median line of the figure is a
pronounced double curve. A third leaner, the resting satyr, has survived in
more copies than any other statue, because to the Roman it represented the
spirit of the sweet half-wild. Praxiteles was famous for his satyrs and Erotes; of his female figures we shall speak presently. The
athlete as such plays no part in his work: athletic youths, like the Hermes,
do: but Praxiteles is always turning with special affection to adolescence and
late childhood, away from the world to a realm of unshaken hours.
The art of
Praxiteles mirrors the life of Athens in his time, or at least the life of many
Athenians: an intelligent life, quiet-tempered, fond of pleasure and tasteful
in its pleasures, taking things lightly, or as lightly as one can. There are
only glimpses of this frame of mind in Plato, for he was too passionate, and
too full of hatred; but there is something like it in the poets, comic and
other, of the fourth century, as we know them from the pages of Athenaeus.
In the temple
of Aphrodite at Megara, Pausanias says, there were statues of Persuasion and
another divinity whom they call Consolation, both by Praxiteles; and of Love,
Yearning, and Desire, by Scopas. Eros might have been done by either: but the
Megarians showed judgment in allocating the other statues—unless indeed it was
the sculptors themselves who chose. For passion, which is excluded from the art
of Praxiteles, is all in all to his Parian contemporary. We hear of no satyrs
by Scopas: but his raging maenad, even in our small and fragmentary copy, takes
us back to the stormiest creatures of late archaic painting, and its strong
twist on its axis is something new in the sculptural rendering of violent
movement. Another of his masterpieces was a great many-figured group of
Poseidon and the demi-gods and monsters of the deep: if the triteness from
Ostia is a copy of one of those figures, or even if it is only an imitation,
Scopas was the first to embody in human form that eternal hunger and unrest1. A
battle-scene and a hunting-scene decorated the pediments of the temple of Athena
at Tegea: Scopas was the architect, and the
sculpture, of which fragments remain, must be of his school and from his
designs. The massive heads with their thickish features and the fury in their
deep set eyes are the opposite of everything Praxitelean, and remind us that
there was another kind of Greek left besides the cultivated Athenian—especially
in Arcadia. Such were not all but most of the men who fought against the
Macedonian and for him, who swarmed over the east and north, and who brought
not only Greek culture, but Greek valour and resolution, wherever they went.
The Christ
Church Van der Goes used to bear the label ‘Rembrandt or Mantegna’: and Pliny
says of the group of Niobe’s children that authorities differed whether it were
by Praxiteles or Scopas. It was doubtless by neither; and the same may be said
of several works which have been attributed now to the one and now to the other
in modern times. One of these is the Hypnos. The chief copy, in Madrid, lacks
the arms: small bronzes show that he held poppies in one hand and poured
something from a horn—poppy-juice—over the eyes of the world. Another boy god;
not however an adaptation of a boy Apollo, or a boy Dionysus, or a boy satyr,
but a new and great imaginative creation: not made into sleep by his
head-wings, or by what he scatters or pours, but through and through sleep,
with his soft, sleek, wellliking body and his strong
and noiseless onward tread.
Turning to
female figures we are able to glance at two sculptors who although they
overlapped with Praxiteles and Scopas were older men. The drapery-style of the
late fifth century—or one of the drapery-styles—garments now clinging and
transparent now tossing in the wind—is continued by an artist of great charm,
the Athenian Timotheus. Timotheus, an inscription informs us, made the
acroteria for the east front of the temple of Asclepius at Epidaurus, and
furnished models for the pedimental sculpture.
Fragments of both acroteria and pediments remain, and enable us to connect with
Timotheus two works which survive in copies only, the Leda of the Capitol, and
the Rospigliosi Athena in Florence. Both statues have
much of the late fifth century in drapery, in big features, in strong-waved
hair, but the fourth century shows itself in the emotion of the far-away upward
gaze; and the early fourth century, rather than the later, in a certain
delicacy and even frailty of form. Cephisodotus, another Athenian, also looks
both backwards and forwards. His Eirene—Peace with the infant Wealth in her
arms—was set up at Athens shortly after 375, and symbolizes the revival of
Athenian prosperity after the great disaster and the generation of despair and
half-hopes which succeeded it. The Eirene harks back, in the simpler fall of
its drapery, not to the grandiose goddesses of the late fifth century, but to
those of the Parthenonian period and before. On the
other hand, the tender intimate feeling is of the fourth century; and has the
face not something ethereal which belongs to the spring of the period and not
to the full bloom? Wealth is nothing without Health: and another famous Attic
statue of the same time as the Eirene was the original of the Deepdene Hygieia; she also not one of the great deities, but a
strong and kindly presence with a solid boon to bestow.
External
evidence as well as internal points to a connection between Cephisodotus and
Praxiteles: Cephisodotus was perhaps an elder brother, certainly the
forerunner. The note of simplicity which he strikes persists in the draped
figures that go back to Praxiteles and his circle: a different simplicity, of
course, from that of the Hestia Giustiniani or Amelung’s goddess; for it bears the imprint of a more
conscious art. One of the chief ingredients in it is the toning-down of the two
contrasts which had dominated the drapery of the later fifth century: the
contrast between clinging parts and parts flying free; and the contrast between
parts which reveal and parts which conceal. The garments now tend to wind
equably round the body or hang equably over it, neither cleaving to it nor
masking it, but swathing —or clothing it. This principle is not confined to
Praxiteles, but appears for instance in the Hygieia,
and in one of the noblest originals which have reached us from the fourth
century, the seated figure of Demeter, from Cnidus, in the British Museum. The
deep impression which the Demeter leaves, as of the mother acquainted with
grief, and enduring under it, is not due to the head alone, but in part also to
the draped body—the garments drawn about it, and the legs turned with a
suggestion of selfconstraint.
Praxitelean
drapery is not to be reduced to a formula: and one of the most charming of
Praxitelean statues, the Artemis from Gabii in the
Louvre, stands somewhat aside, for the motive of the girlish figure is the
actual adjustment of the drapery. The most celebrated of the statues by
Praxiteles was not a draped figure, but a naked one, the Aphrodite at Cnidus.
Naked or half-naked female statues, rare in the fifth century, begin to be
common in the fourth: but it has been suggested that the nakedness of the Cnidian, and her gesture as well, had a special
authorization—were borrowed from some hallowed and primitive image preserved in
the sanctuary from the dim past. The gesture of the hand, and the shrinking of
the whole body which accompanies it, are reported to be instinctive
expressions of modesty. In themselves they are mean; but from trivial or even
disgusting motives, provided they beautifully unfurled the body, the sculptor
of the Lizard-slayer was hardly the man to recoil. Such copies as we have of
the Cnidian make it difficult to understand the
reputation of the statue in antiquity. Here, if anywhere, we miss the
sculptor’s hand: judging from the Hermes, we must suppose that in the original
these dull heavy forms were fused into a figure instinct with glowing life.
Let us not
end this section on this note, but with a glance at three modest originals
which belong to Praxiteles or to his school. The first two take us back to our
starting-point the Hermes: the exquisite statuette of Artemis, from Cyprus, in
Vienna, by its attitude; the head of a girl goddess, from Chios, in Boston, by
the large architecture which keeps its surface-delicacy from cloying. The
third, another head in Boston, this time from Athens, makes one think of the
sons of Praxiteles, of whose style, a continuation of their father’s, we now
know a little from fragments found at Cos.
Aegina,
Olympia, Parthenon: they summed the achievements of their epochs. There is no
fourth-century monument corresponding to these. The Mausoleum comes nearest:
but the difference is immense. Even if the Mausoleum were completely extant,
how could the super-sepulchre of a hellenized Carian,
even though the work of the most eminent Greek artists, be more than a ‘wild
enormity of ancient magnanimity’ compared with the great civic and national
monuments of Greece? Its importance is nevertheless considerable, especially as
its date is known, for Mausolus died in 353 and his widow, who ordered the
tomb, two years later. Four great sculptors are said to have worked on the
building, Timotheus and Scopas, Bryaxis and Leochares, each taking one side: but the apportionment of
the fragments is not yet beyond doubt. The most significant slabs of the amazonomachy, though not the best-preserved, are those
which by a curious coincidence have been skied into the fancy restoration of
the order and replaced on the level of the eye by casts. These slabs with their
lean and terrifying figures and their novel whirl of movement already speak the
language of the later fourth century, and are presumably Leocharean.
Another work
done by a Greek for a foreigner is the so-called Alexander sarcophagus in
Constantinople, made for a Sidonian prince; remarkable for its marvellous
preservation, colour and all, for the admirable portraits of Alexander and his
war-marked marshal Parmenion, and for the intense animation of its hunting and
fighting scenes. There is nothing Lysippean in it,
although the date must be well on in the second half of the century; but
something of the spirit of Scopas and his Tegean pediments.
The greatest
figure in the sculpture of the second half of the fourth century is Lysippus of
Sicyon: our literary sources represent him as a great realist, and the inventor
of a new system of proportions. The athlete scraping himself, in the Vatican,
is in all probability a copy of his bronze Apoxyomenus,
and it is something new in sculpture. The head is smaller, the legs longer
than before, so that the whole figure looks slenderer and taller: this agrees
with the description of Lysippean proportions in
Pliny. In the treatment of flesh it goes along with the Hermes of Praxiteles as
against the fifth century: but waist and joints are more compressed than in the
Hermes, and the muscles harder and more prominent: in a word there is less fat:
this is the siccity or dryness of which Pliny speaks.
The attitude of the body has something momentary about it: it is not planted
solidly with the weight on one leg as in the fifth century: one leg is the supporting
leg and one is the free; but the contrast between the two is no longer the
dominant motive: the weight seems almost to be in process of transference from
the one to the other. Again, the figure as a whole is not so much in one plane
as earlier figures; which are more or less flattened out before us,
relief-like, so that we can enjoy, in a select view, the clarity and harmony of
the contour which contains the figure. The position of the scraper in space is
more like that of an actual person discovered in the dressing-room. The plane
is constantly shifting as the eye passes from one part to the other; and the
right arm stretches out straight towards us in strong foreshortening. This tridimensionalism is one of the last words in realism: and
has been described as ‘the final step taken by sculpture in the achievement of
its specific perfection.’ It opens up a fresh world of possibilities: but
there is seldom gain without loss; and the new age produces too many statues
which have many quite good views, but no perfect view; like the Lysippean Lansdowne Hermes, or the later Eros bending his
bow.
From all
these causes the Apoxyomenus is the very antithesis
of the Doryphorus in aspect and tone. In tone, for
although he is not facing an opponent but simply scraping himself, yet there is
excitement not only in his face but in every limb. This is one form of the
pathos of the fourth century, as contrasted with the ethos of the fifth. There
is the same excitement in the Lansdowne Hermes, and the same in the athlete Agias from Delphi. The Agias has
been compared with the Lansdowne Heracles, which is a copy of a Scopaic work. There is a superficial resemblance in pose,
and the Agias is not yet tridimensional like the Apoxyomenus. But there the resemblance ends:
the Agias has the new proportions, the new balance on
the legs, and the new emotion running through the figure from top to toe. The Agias is a fourth-century work, and has been thought with
good reason to be a free copy of a bronze, though an early bronze, by Lysippus.
Whether it is or not, it belongs to the new age, and the Scopaic Heracles—even if we replace the head by the better copy, in bronze, from
Herculaneum—to the old.
Lysippus was
an extraordinarily prolific artist, and there are a good many other statues
which seem to be copies of works by him. The silen with the infant Dionysus3, from the subject, and because it is a leaning
figure, makes one think of the Hermes of Praxiteles, of his resting satyr: but
there is as strong a contrast between these and the Lysippean silen, with his oldened and coarsened forms, his not
graceful attitude, and the deeper and more sombre tone of the whole work, as
between the smiling figures of late archaic art and the gravity of early
classical sculpture.
Apoxyomenus and Agias are athlete statues, and the Lansdowne Hermes is
perhaps an athlete rather than Hermes. Athlete statues were made throughout the
fourth century, but it is not surprising that they should be more significant
in the time of Lysippus than in the earlier part of the period. Nor is it to be
wondered at that Lysippus was famous for his portraits. Portraiture flourished
throughout the century, and a realistic element, unfamiliar to earlier
portraiture, was introduced by Demetrius of Alopece in the first decades. Many copies of fourth-century portraits have reached us,
but usually only the head was copied, and that with the individuality
exaggerated to caricature. Of the full-length portraits that have survived
entire or nearly—and it is only in these that we can appreciate the
achievements of the fourth century in portraiture—neither the Aeschines nor the
Sophocles can have been a masterpiece of characterization: the Socrates, now
known from the London statuette, must have been1. The greatest of all is the
Demosthenes: its date is 280, so that it lies outside our period; but without
Lysippus it would have been impossible.
In the
treatment of drapery, the fourth century, as it advances, turns once more to
contrast for its effects: to the old contrast of clinging and flying, as in the
Florence Niobids, poor copies of a somewhat theatrical group of statues made in
the late part of our period; and to the new contrasts set up, either by a heavy
swag of massed drapery across the middle of the body, as in the Artemisia from
the Mausoleum, or by the taut bands, made by the hand holding and pulling part
of the garment, which dominate the drapery of the women from Herculaneum in
Dresden. A realism in drapery, corresponding to Lysippean realism in the rendering of the body, it is difficult to find in the fourth
century itself: for the maid of Antium, with her
wonderful realistic drapery, seems to belong to the beginning of the next
period.
We may
conclude with a glance at the reliefs on the Attic tombstones of the fourth
century. The series ends, owing to the sumptuary law of Demetrius of Phalerum, in 317. In the early part of the period
fifth-century tradition persists: low relief with strong perpendiculars and
horizontals; and a subdued tone. But the emotion of the fourth century soon
makes its way in, and the right angles give place to curves and diagonals as
mother yearns to son or daughter to mother. The relief becomes higher, and
sheers backwards into depth, until in the late fourth century the figures are
almost in the round, and the background, at first neutral, becomes a sort of
dark shed-like room in which the figures have their being. In the last stage,
the new realism deepens the pathos. The survival of the fifth-century
tradition, with only the beginning of change, may be illustrated by the
wonderful stele of Sostrate in New York1: she looking
at her father, who sits in the middle like a god, while her mother stands
behind him holding her granddaughter, Sostrate’s child, by the hand. Athens 870 shows the full fourth-century style: the two
quiet figures of the earlier tombstones, the seated and the standing woman,
have become all gesture, action, and emotion: so that the meeting of older
woman and younger, mother and daughter, takes one’s mind to the great
Visitations of Christian art. The feeling is enhanced by a third figure, the
third age, the girl, not much more than a child, who watches and understands.
In the stele from the Ilissus the pathos is of a
different kind3: the young man, who has died, and the old man gazing at him and
trying to fathom why such things happen: corresponding to the child in the last
piece, a twofold foil—the dog alive and distressed, the little servant
sleeping. The vigil for the dead, marvellously transfigured. Finally, the
stele Athens 731. The motive resembles that of the stele from the Ilissus, but is very differently treated. A young man, this
time a soldier, and his father. No care for the old beauty of harmonious line
or attitude, but all the beauty and force of the new realism.
II.
CLASSICAL
PAINTING: (II) THE FOURTH CENTURY
Greek
painting was thought by the ancients to have reached its highest point in the
fourth century, and Apelles was acclaimed the greatest of Greek painters.
Apelles was an Ionian from Colophon, but the two great centres were those
districts which had always been the eyes of artistic Greece: Athens and Sicyon.
The topic was still figurework, narrative or representational; there was also
portraiture, especially of the heroic kind: still-life, that is stilllife for its own sake, was hardly beginning; there
were landscape elements in pictures, but no landscape-painting. By the
perfection of the encaustic process, painters could obtain subtler effects than
before.
The works of
Apelles and his peers have all perished; and our monumental sources of
information are scanty and unsatisfactory. The vases tell us the story of
vases, and something about contemporary painting as a whole: but the art of
vase-painting is in full decline, and besides, it remains linear, whereas the
great painters were now masters of light and colour, and thought in those as
well as in line. One masterpiece survives in a copy, the Battle of Alexander
and Darius. Roman decorative painting preserves something of others, but almost
inextricably overgrown.
Attic
vase-painting touches bottom in the early part of the fourth century. It
subsists on the Meidian tradition diluted; and is so
insipid and vulgar that it is not always recognized as Attic. In the second
quarter of the century a revival begins. In the Kerch vases—as these latest of
Attic red-figure vases are often called—there are flickers of beauty. The tall,
dignified figures are a relief from the debased roly-polies of the sub-Meidian period; but they in their turn are often vacuous
and mannered, and with its predilection for three-quartered faces and
three-quartered and frontal figures, and its neglect of the speaking contour,
the style is not really suitable to vase-painting. It is not confined to vases,
but appears in drawings on ivory and bronze: it is the manner of some great
painter or school of painting.
In Italy the
prospect is not much more pleasing. Some of the phlyax vases, with their scenes from farces, are delightful. The Dolon in London is not a farce, but a burlesque of epic: in its pattern of men and
trees, it is worthy to set beside Pollaiuolo’s Battle
of the Nudes; in its mastery of the comic, beside the Heracles and Busiris of the old Ionian. When we turn to the big Apulian
vases of the second half of the century, we note the slickness of hand, and we
can put up with a square inch or so here and there: but it is really time that
vase-painting ceased; and practically it ceases, in Italy as well as in Attica,
at the end of the century.
Our copy of
the Battle of Alexander and Darius—doubtless the Issus, freely treated—must be fullsize, and it bears every token of being an accurate
copy: but it is mutilated; and it is in mosaic, and how much of the rush and
terror of the original must have been lost! Think of the Miracle of St Mark in
mosaic, or Rubens’s Battle of the Amazons. Of the sober colour-scheme we have
spoken before, and of the technical devices—modelling in light and dark, use of
cast-shadows, high-lights, reflected lights: in so serried a composition, aerial
perspective can have . little place; but these seem to be traces of it; and
Plato’s censure shows that the art of diminishing the figures according to the
supposed distance from the eye was familiar to the painters of his time. The
extraordinary complexity of the composition has often been remarked; the wealth
of graphic and pictorial interest in detail; and the devastating total effect.
The beauty of the actual painting-work we can guess, and we know that fourthcentury painters and critics paid the closest
attention to material and texture. The great figure-pieces of Velasquez come to
the mind—not only because of the lances: but because of the colourscheme and the colours, because there are no stopgaps or dead filling in the picture,
and because the grand and purposed contrast of West and East plays as essential
a part in the Battle of Alexander, as that of South and North in the Surrender
of Breda.
The
wall-paintings from Pompeii, Herculaneum, and elsewhere are more treacherous
ground. The problem is different from that of sculptural copies: for there is
nothing in painting which is parallel to the cast, and the statue is not part
of a decoration but a work by itself. The Achilles and Briseis must go back to
a painting by a fourth-century artist: but how much of the colouring and values
is his? and what corresponded in the original to the vapid Briseis, or to the
bores with trick helmets in the background? Elsewhere we have more than one
imitation of a single original, but the imitations agree in only the broadest
outlines: so in the Paris and Helen, so in the Odysseus and Penelope. The
patient study of Campanian wall-painting has taught us something about the
painting of the classical period and will teach us more: but of the works
inspired by fourth-century painting, there is not one which does not contain a
disturbing number of elements that cannot be fourth-century.
Analogies
from sculpture help, but must not be laboured. No one who reads about Apelles
can help thinking of Praxiteles. But Apelles cannot have been a Praxiteles in
painting: for the greater the artist the more he differs from all other
artists. In the Greek paintings of the fourth century we have lost a world.
III.
FOURTH-CENTURY
DORIC ARCHITECTURE
In
considering the architecture of the fifth century, our attention was chiefly
centred upon Athens, but it will be otherwise when we turn to the fourth. It is
not surprising that after the amazing activity of the half century before
Aegospotami the impoverished city was content, for the most part, to enjoy the
legacy of her golden age. Nor can much work of importance now be traced in
Sicily or Italy. For Doric we must look chiefly to Delphi and to the
Peloponnese, for Ionic to Asia Minor. Corinthian was creeping into importance,
but in this period it never ventured beyond interiors, except in such small and
barely architectural works as the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates.
At Delphi the
chief work of the fourth century was the sixth temple of Apollo, which replaced
the Alcmaeonid building, ruined, it would seem, by rain and subsidence, between
360 and 330 BC: but, though we know from inscriptions a great deal about its
history, its remains are scanty and difficult to understand. As a type of
fourth-century Doric on the grand scale it will be better to take the temple of
Athena Aiea at Tegeaf the largest and noblest in the
Peloponnese, after that of Zeus at Olympia. Closely connected with Tegea is the temple of Zeus at Nemea, and since at Nemea
three columns still stand, bearing part of the architrave, while Tegea is wholly ruined, it might seem wiser to choose the
better preserved building as our text. The Tegean temple, however, has been better explored and published; moreover it was far
more famous in antiquity, and probably served as Nemea’s model. At Tegea certainly, and possibly at Nemea, the architect was
the sculptor Scopas.
In one
respect only the Tegean temple was old-fashioned, for
it was narrower in proportion than any other temple of the fourth century. In
fineness of workmanship it is almost unrivalled, except by the Erechtheum. The material was local marble. There were
refinements in the setting of walls and columns, and the stylobate had
horizontal curvature, which began in the foundations. Externally the chief
definite sign of lateness was the slenderness of the columns, which can hardly
be paralleled except at Nemea, long famous as the best example of this Ionic
tendency in fourth-century Doric. The Nemean columns, indeed, are even slighter
than the Tegean, but the resemblance between the two
sets is very close, not only in slenderness, but in the lowness and
straightness of the echinus, which has lost almost the last trace of that
strong archaic curve, whose influence was still subtly perceptible in the
Parthenon.
At Tegea the plan of the cella was
simple, with pronaos and opisthodomos each distyle in antis. As at Bassae, and in the temple of Zeus at Olympia, no metopes
were decorated with sculpture except those inside the colonnade, at each end of
the cella: a notable severity in a sculptor’s
building, where seemingly no expense was spared. In the interior the whole
decoration was purely Ionic in character, if Corinthian capitals may be treated
as a development of Ionic. This decoration was used with austerity and
restraint, though in detail its richness and complexity rival even the Erechtheum and the sixth-century Ionic treasuries of
Delphi. The general disposition of the interior was a further development of
the arrangements of Bassae. Here again half-columns
were used, but they did not stand, as at Bassae, at
the ends of projecting cross-walls, being engaged in the cella wall. There were fourteen Corinthian half-columns— seven on each side—and
pilasters with elaborately moulded capitals in the four inner angles. All alike
rested upon a beautiful base moulding, which ran round the wall and the feet of
the halfcolumns and pilasters, as did the exterior
base moulding of the Olympieum of Acragas.
A side-door led into the cella from the middle of the
northern peripteral colonnade. The bases of the
Corinthian half-columns somewhat resembled those of the Ionic half-columns of Bassae: it will be convenient to discuss their capitals at
a later point. The exact date of the Tegean temple is
uncertain, but we know that its predecessor was burnt in 395 It may perhaps be
placed in the second third of the fourth century.
Two more
mainland Doric buildings of the early fourth century deserve more than a
passing reference, the circular peripteral tholoi of
Delphi and Epidaurus, both externally Doric but internally Corinthian. This
was an old type of ground-plan though it never became common. The
fourth-century Delphian tholos was close to the ‘Massaliote’
Treasury in the small sanctuary of Athena Pronaia,
and would seem to have been famous in antiquity, for Vitruvius records that Theodorus of Phocaea wrote a book ‘de tholo qui est Delphis’: it is far
more likely that Theodorus wrote of this later work,
than of the less remarkable sixth-century Doric tholos^ peripteral,
with thirteen old-fashioned columns, which stood in the sanctuary proper. The
later tholos is one of the most carefully designed and perfectly executed works
of antiquity. The single door faces exactly south. The visible parts of the
building were all of marble or timber, except for a sparing use of black
Eleusinian limestone. On a stylobate of three steps it had twenty exterior
Doric columns, each with twenty flutes, and this outer colonnade carried a
coffered marble ceiling, of simple and beautiful design. The restoration of the
upper parts is doubtful in detail. There are remains of larger and smaller sets
of triglyphs, sculptured metopes, and simae. The
smaller triglyphs were at the top of the cella wall,
inside the peripteral colonnade. It has been
suggested that the cella walls rose above the roof of the outer colonnade and
carried a separate cornice. This solution, however, raises technical
difficulties, and no satisfactory place has been found for the smaller sima.
Inside was a podium, moulded above and below, and faced with Eleusinian stone.
It carried a series of Corinthian columns, slightly engaged. They were probably
ten in number. Their capitals, which are important, will be discussed at a
later point. The ceiling and roof were of timber, the tiles of marble: there is
evidence that the architrave carried by the engaged columns was itself wooden.
The date of this tholos is disputed. It is usually assigned to the early fourth
century, but some authorities would place it in the last quarter of the fifth.
The date of
the more famous Epidaurian tholos, is fairly certain
from the evidence of inscriptions: it was probably built between 360 and 330.
The architect, according to Pausanias, was Polyclitus; clearly the younger
artist of that name, a sculptor-architect like Scopas. It was probably inspired
by the Delphian building, but surpassed it in size and in elaboration, though
not in beauty and restraint. At Delphi the diameter of the stylobate was about
45 feet, but at Epidaurus it was about 107, and the other dimensions were, of
course, proportionately greater. Unlike the Delphian tholos, which stands on a
solid limestone foundation, the Epidaurian building
rested on concentric rings of masonry, whose maze-like design has provoked much
speculation of religious rather than architectural interest. In general plan it
closely resembled the Delphian tholos, except that the exterior Doric columns,
which were of limestone, numbered twenty-six, and the interior Corinthian
columns, which were of marble, numbered fourteen, and were not engaged but
free. The cella wall was mostly of limestone, but
marble and Eleusinian stone were used at its crown and foot: its outer face did
not, as at Delphi, carry a triglyph frieze. The ceiling was partly of marble
and partly of wood. The nature of the roof is uncertain.
The metopes
of the outer colonnade were decorated not with figured sculpture but with
rosettes. The marble cofferings of the pteron ceiling
were very elaborate, and the innermost pavement was composed of a diamond
pattern of white marble and black Eleusinian stone. The most interesting things
in the building are the Corinthian capitals, one of which, unused, was found
buried, for unknown reasons, a yard under the ancient surface: but these also
must be discussed at a later point.
That these
two tholoi have much in common is obvious: but there is something less obvious
that links them both with Tegea, with Nemea, and with
many other Doric works of the late fifth or fourth century of which there is
here no space to speak: the Metroum at Olympia, for
instance, and the temples of Asclepius and Artemis at Epidaurus. In all we feel
that Doric has become a new thing. In some way not easily defined—it is deeper
than slenderness of proportion or richness of detail—Doric has drunk the spirit
of Ionic, and a new style has been born. Yet these exquisite masterpieces were
almost the last incarnation of monumental Doric. The great temples of the next
generation were pure Ionic, in the Asiatic tradition.
In truth
Doric was dying. It was still to produce a few delightful temples, like that
of Cori in Latium, but its spirit lived chiefly in less ambitious works—in
market porticoes for instance, and in the charming colonnades of domestic
peristyles. Yet the sculptor-architects of this late Doric bequeathed to their Ionic
successors one momentous gift. The Corinthian capital, Ionic in origin, but
evolved by Doric artists as a subtle refinement of interior decoration, was
destined to drive both its rivals from the field, and to remain for all time
the most characteristic feature of classical architecture.
IV.
THE
CORINTHIAN CAPITAL
It will be
fitting here to say something of the development of the Corinthian capital in
the fourth century. This can be traced chiefly in the buildings at Delphi, Tegea and Epidaurus already described, in the Choragic
Monument of Lysicrates at Athens and in the Philippeum of Olympia. Of these the Delphian capitals are
perhaps the earliest. Only fragments survive, but they closely resemble in many
respects the pioneer capital of Bassae described in
the last volume. Much of the bell was bare and there were large pairs of inner
spirals placed low, with a big palmette between them entirely below the abacus.
It would seem however that these spirals did not spring from the double ring of
acanthus leaves which surrounded the base of the capital but were continuous
with the angle spirals under the abacus. This scheme is not found in any other
Greek Corinthian capital, but recalls that of a unique archaic pillar capital
from Megara Hyblaea in Sicily.
The striking
and attractive Tegean capitals are hardly less
curious, and show how little the type was yet fixed. They are unusually low and
squat in proportion. At the base of the bell is a double row of shaggy acanthus
leaves: the angle spirals each spring from a fluted sheath or cauliculus crowned with an acanthus leaf, of the type which
became orthodox, but appears here for the first time. There were, however, no
inner spirals, and the central palmette was replaced by a single acanthus leaf,
reaching to the bottom of the abacus.
The capitals
of the Epidaurian tholos are extraordinarily pleasing
in a quite new way. The chief impression of the earliest capitals—at Bassae, Delphi, Tegea—is an
impression of strength: the members are large and relatively simple, and the
whole treatment is broad and forcible. At Epidaurus Polyclitus aimed above all
at delicacy and grace. The capitals look almost like beautiful flowers; it is
no accident that the central ornament, which has climbed one stage further
towards its destined seat on the side of the abacus, is not here a palmette or
an acanthus leaf, but a blossom. The spirals are slender and tall, and their
slightness is enhanced by the fact that their stems are quite bare and
separate, and do not spring from a cauliculus. Yet
there is much that links these capitals with their predecessors, especially the
bareness of the bell, and the solidity of the abacus. The acanthus leaves at
the base, alternately short and tall, are orthodox in character.
Next in date
come two sets of capitals carved in the third quarter of the fourth century,
those of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, and
those of the Philippeum at Olympia. The Choragic
Monument (erected in 334) is one of the best known works of antiquity. It is a
small circular structure of Pentelic marble, standing on a quadrangular
basement. The circular part is of marble, and consists of a sort of cella, hollow but not accessible, with six engaged
Corinthian columns. These have Attic-Ionic bases, and an Ionic entablature,
which shows the perhaps unprecedented combination of a continuous frieze,
sculptured in relief, with dentils under the cornice. The roof is a single
block of marble, carved to suggest a sort of tiling of laurel leaves. It was
crowned with a magnificent finial of acanthus ornament, which originally
carried the tripod of victory. The diameter of the circular structure is about
nine feet. The capitals, which here chiefly concern us, are much mutilated, but
their forms are fairly certain. In spirit they resemble those of Epidaurus,
for they aim chiefly at richness and delicacy, but in certain important details
they are nearer to the orthodox type of later times. Not only do the inner and
outer volutes spring, as at Tegea, from a single
sheath, but the central ornament, a palmette, is almost on the abacus, which is
elaborately moulded. The treatment of the leaves at the base is individual. The
charm of these capitals, as of the whole structure, springs largely from the
pleasant irresponsibility of an artist playing at architecture. The monument is
a delightful toy.
The circular Philippeum at Olympia, probably erected by Alexander the
Great, more nearly resembled the tholos of Delphi. It was a peripteral limestone structure, on a base of three marble steps, with marble cornice and
tiles: the diameter on the top step was about fifty feet. The outer colonnade
was of eighteen limestone Ionic columns, while inside were twelve engaged
Corinthian columns, which seem to have supported a second row, similar but
smaller. The inner columns had no bases. Their capitals have many features
which later became orthodox, such as large acanthus leaves in two rows, and
angle spirals springing from fluted cauliculi, but
the inner spirals and the central ornament were entirely omitted, this part of
the bell being covered with upright leaves in relief.
This is not
the place to discuss in detail the later development of the Corinthian capital.
The third-century capitals of the Olympieum of
Athens, with their fluted cauliculi, became the great
models of Roman orthodoxy, but the Epidaurian type,
with independent spirals, was popular in the Hellenistic age, and many other
forms were employed, especially in Sicily and Italy. In the Roman Imperial
period, however, abnormal capitals were usually conscious and often fantastic
variations from the orthodox type.
In Asia,
temple architecture was almost exclusively Ionic. Of the few exceptions one
only, the temple of Athena Polias Nikephoros at Pergamum, has been assigned to the fourth century B.C. This dating rests
chiefly upon the lettering of certain dedicatory inscriptions. It is likely
from its position in the city, and from points of material and technique, that
the temple is earlier than the bulk of Pergamene work, but the general style
would scarcely point to a date earlier than 300 BC. Moreover, the temple had
double the traditional number of triglyphs, usually a late Hellenistic feature.
It was a simple hexastyle peripteros, having six
columns by ten, a late type of proportion. The columns were unfluted, except
for a strip below the echinus.
V.
IONIC
ARCHITECTURE IN ASIA
The chief
sites of fourth-century Ionic architecture in Asia are Ephesus, Priene,
Halicarnassus, Miletus, and Sardes. The old
Artemisium of Ephesus was burnt in the fourth century BC The best-known
tradition, derived from Theopompus, assigns this
disaster to the night of Alexander’s birth, in 356, but the new temple seems to
have inspired so much of the architecture of the second half of the fourth
century that it is more likely that Eusebius is right in giving 395 as the date
of the fire. In general plan this temple was almost identical with its gigantic
sixth-century predecessor, being dipteral (eight columns by twenty in the outer
row), and measuring about 164 by about 342 feet on the stylobate: but the
raising of the floor level by some seven feet necessitated a great extension of
the surrounding steps. There are no remains of a continuous frieze, and
probably there was none: but the ruins are scanty, and fragments of dentils are
likewise lacking. The height of the columns is unknown, but there are remains
of bases, shafts and capitals, as well as of various mouldings, and of
architrave, sima, roof-tiles and acroteria. The bases are of Asiatic-Ionic
type, and probably rested on rectangular plinths. The capitals show a slightly
later stage of development than those from Sardes which are assigned to the fifth century. The most characteristic features of
these Ephesian capitals are the strong projection of the echinus, the deep
cutting round its eggs, the curved hollow of the volute-band, and the position
of the eye, at once well outside the perpendicular of the upper diameter of
the shaft and well above the horizontal of the bottom of the echinus. The
general tendency in later work was for the capital to shrink both in height and
width, or that the eye approached or touched the point where these lines
intersect.
The most
striking peculiarity of the Ephesian columns was the presence in many, but not
in all, of tall drums carved with figures in relief: there were also some
quadrangular pedestals of the same height and similarly carved, which evidently
replaced the lowest portion of some of the columns. Both these features were
inherited from the older temple. The exact arrangement of the carved pedestals
and drums has been much disputed: the elder Pliny states that the total number
of columns in the temple was 127, of which 36 had carving.
It is
exceedingly difficult to judge of the original appearance of this temple, or of
those that are now to be described, especially as some of them were not
finished till Roman days: but, despite their careful planning and magnificent
decoration, it is impossible not to suspect that they were uninteresting. The
old freshness has vanished, and the splendour that has replaced it is barren
and empty. The vulgarity so obvious in later Ionic is already perceptible
before the close of the fourth century.
The temple of
Athena Polias at Priene was comparatively small,
measuring about 64 feet by about 122 feet on the stylobate: but it was very
famous, and its architect Pythios wrote a book about
it, as Vitruvius twice remarks. It was most carefully planned: the cella, for instance, was 100 Greek feet long, the plinths
below the column bases 1 foot high, 6 feet square, and 6 feet apart. It was a
simple peripteros, six by eleven, like several fourth
century Doric temples in Greece. The architectural forms seem to be indebted to
those of the later Ephesian temple. There were dentils but almost certainly no
continuous frieze. The temple was dedicated by Alexander the Great, as an
extant inscription from the south anta of the pronaos states.
An even more
famous work, built and described (in a lost treatise) by the same architect,
was the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, the tomb begun by Mausolus of Caria, and
finished by his wife Artemisia, after his death in 353. The greatest sculptors
of the day are said to have competed in its decoration; but its construction
was no less renowned than its adornment. Abundant remains have been recovered
and the elder Pliny professes to give many of its measurements, but the problem
of its restoration is still hotly debated, and fresh schemes appear almost
every year. The language of ancient descriptions has led some critics, even in
recent times, to postulate a miracle of construction, which suspended a heavy
marble pyramid upon an open colonnade. It seems, however, almost certain that
the monument consisted of a huge rectangular basis, carrying a rectangular cella surrounded by thirty-six Ionic columns, nine by
eleven. The cella and colonnade carried a rather low
stepped pyramid, which was crowned by a chariot-group. The stylobate seems to
have measured about 100 feet by 80 feet: the height of the various parts is
uncertain, for Pliny’s figures are both doubtful and obscure, and modern
discussions have not been conclusive. The architectural style closely resembles
that of the Priene temple, and there was certainly no frieze between architrave
and dentils. There were, however, three sculptured friezes, of which notable
remains survive: two were perhaps on the basis, one on the cella wall.
The oracular
temple of Apollo at Didyma near Miletus was one of the largest and most
magnificent structures of the ancient world: it measured about 359 by 168 feet
on the stylobate. An earlier temple on the site was burnt bv the Persians in 494 and abandoned till the conquests of Alexander the Great.
The oracle was reopened by 331, and some parts of the building seem to belong
to the second half of the fourth century: Seleucus Nicator and his son
Antiochus Soter were certainly active in its
construction before 294, but the work dragged on till the time of Hadrian. The
temple was dipteral, having ten columns by twenty in the outer row: it had a deep
pronaos, containing twelve columns, but no opisthodomos. The greater part of
the cella hardly deserves that name, for it was a
court open to the sky; it was nearly fifteen feet lower in level than the peripteral colonnade and the pronaos, and contained the
famous oracular spring. There was an intermediate room between pronaos and cella, at a still higher level than the pronaos; it was
directly accessible only from the cella floor, by a
great flight of steps. The pronaos was connected with the cella only by two descending passages with arched ceilings, on each side of the
intermediate room: for though there was a huge door between the pronaos and the
intermediate room, its threshold was nearly five feet high, and it must have
served for the proclamation of oracles to visitors in the pronaos. The inner
wall of the cella was adorned with pilasters standing
on a dado at the level of the floor of the intermediate room. Little or none of
this work, however, can confidently, be assigned to the earliest period of
construction, and the only part which calls for a detailed description in this
chapter is the naiskos, or inner shrine, a little
isolated temple within the cella, which seems
definitely to belong to the fourth century. It was a tetrastyle amphiprostyle
structure, measuring about 28 by 48 feet. There was a pronaos but no
opisthodomos. The entablature had a very low frieze, with formal ornament,
between architrave and dentils. This shrine housed the famous statue by Canachus, which Seleucus Nicator sent back from Ecbatana,
whither the Persians had carried it in the fifth century.
One more
Asiatic temple calls for a few words here, the well-preserved temple of Artemis
at Sardesf5. Its fifth-century form has already been briefly described. In its
surviving state, like the Didymaeum, it is of many
dates, difficult to disentangle, but its general scheme appears to belong to
the last quarter of the fourth century. Externally it had eight columns by
twenty. It was pseudo-dipteral at the sides, but not at the ends, where very
deep prostyle porches projected from the cella to
within one inter-columniation of the peripteral colonnade. The peripteral columns on the facades were so spaced as to produce inter-columniations widening gradually towards the centre, from about 17 feet to about 23 feet: the
flank inter-columniations were a little narrower than
the narrowest of those on the facades. Such unequal spacing on the facades was
probably usual in Asiatic Ionic till Hellenistic times. At Ephesus it is
thought that the central inter-columniations measured
roughly twenty-eight feet.
The cella contained twelve columns in two rows, and behind it
lay an inner chamber, containing two columns. The building had several curious
features. The space, at each end, between the front columns of the porch and
its back wall, measured more than 44 feet, and the clear width of the porch was
more than 57 feet. Unlike the cella, these huge
rectangles had no interior supports, and it is doubtful if they can have been
roofed. Again, at the east end a simple flight of low steps, between
balustrades, gave access to the stylobate, as in most of these colossal
temples, whose principal steps were far too high for practical use: but at the
back the remains of steps round the porch and outside the pteron suggest that
here some of the columns at the angles of the pteron stood upon pedestals, a most
unusual scheme. In any case four of the porch columns certainly stood upon
square pedestals, namely the two at each end in the middle of the front row.
These columns were smaller than any of the rest, and were probably reused
relics of the fifth-century temple. The pedestals have a rough band, intended
for relief-sculpture, but this was never carried out.
VI.
CIVIL
BUILDINGS: THERSILION AND PHILON’S ARSENAL
It remains to
speak of buildings other than temples. For private houses there is little to
add to what was said of fifth-century practice in the last volume . There is,
however, at Olympia one large official residence, which deserves a word, the Leonidaeum. This was remodelled in Roman times, but its
original plan can be traced. It was a huge rectangle, 263 by 243 feet,
consisting of an open court surrounded by rooms. There was an inner peristyle
of 44 Doric columns and a low outer colonnade of 138 Ionic ones.
Of purely
public buildings the most interesting are the Thersilion at Megalopolis and Philon’s arsenal at the Piraeus. The Thersilionf6 was the
assembly hall of that Arcadian league which sprang from the Theban victory at
Leuctra : Pausanias saw it already in ruins. Like Pericles’ Odeum and the
Telesterion at Eleusis it was a large rectangular building, with a forest of
columns to carry its roof, but these were cleverly arranged in radiating lines,
to minimize interference with sight and hearing. The columns were of stone, and
probably Doric. The ground sloped downwards and inwards from north, east, and
west, towards the space from which the lines of columns radiated, which lay
south of the true centre of the building: the whole was perhaps floored with
wood. The arrangements south of the central space are obscure. A large prostyle
Doric porch, with fourteen columns in the front row, occupied the centre of the
south front, facing the theatre, which was part of the same architectural
scheme. Four columns originally divided the porch from the hall, but this was
later replaced by a wall with doors. This change, with others designed to
strengthen the fabric, was perhaps made in the third century. In the original
design some of the wooden architraves had a span of 34 feet. The Thersilion measured 218 by 173 feet. The influence of the
theatre type upon its general plan is unmistakable.
The Piraeus
arsenal, for the storage of naval tackle, was built soon after the middle of
the fourth century by the same Philon who added the great porch to the
Telesterion at Eleusis. The building was destroyed by Sulla, but a surviving
inscription gives such full details of its construction and dimensions that few
existing works are so completely intelligible. It was a long narrow structure,
measuring externally 400 by 55 Attic feet, a little less than the corresponding
English measures. There were no porches, and the external decoration was
confined to plain pediments at the ends, and a triglyph frieze all round.
Seventy stone columns thirty feet high, divided the interior into nave and
aisles, and each aisle contained a wooden gallery. There was a plain window, 2
feet by 3, in the outer wall, behind each inter-columniation,
and three more at each end. The roof was of a heavy and wasteful type: thick
timber architraves connected the columns longitudinally, and beams of the same
size joined each pair of opposite columns across the nave. Wooden blocks on the
centres of the cross-beams supported a ridge-beam, and the framework of the
roof, tiled with terra cotta, clay-bedded, rested upon outer walls, architrave,
and ridge-beam. The principle of the trussed roof was wholly absent.
Of
fourth-century theatres little need here be said, for remodelling, in almost
every case, has obscured or destroyed their most interesting features, and a
general account of the subject was given in the last volume. At Athens the
surviving auditorium is fundamentally the work of Lycurgus, towards the close
of the fourth century; it replaced an unfinished Periclean scheme. Lycurgus
also built the first stone skene, but we know little of this, except
that it had wings (paraskenia), probably
colonnaded, projecting forwards at each end. The skene of the fourth-century
theatre at Eretria seems to have been of the same general type. The beautiful
theatre at Epidaurus also dates from this period, but of its original stone
skene we know practically nothing, and at Megalopolis the skene was of wood.
Some theatres in Asia Minor, such as those of Priene and Magnesia, may date
from the very close of the fourth century, but they belong essentially to the
Hellenistic period: while the fourthcentury theatre
at Syracuse in Sicily preserves no clear remains of its original scenic
arrangements.
In general,
the architecture of this period was stationary and unenterprising. There was
little use of new materials or methods. Alexander’s conquests familiarized the
Greeks with the burnt brick of Mesopotamia, but this material hardly appeared
in Greece till Roman times; nor was concrete adopted, though Theophrastus knew
and appreciated the strength of the gypsum mortar employed especially in Cyprus
and Phoenicia. The arch alone, immemorial in Egypt and Mesopotamia, was
creeping into prominence at the end of the fourth century. It had been used
long before for town-gates in Acarnania and for minor purposes elsewhere, but
the architects of Priene, about 300 BC, were seemingly the first to employ it
in important positions in a great city with high artistic standards. One of
their town-gates had an arch with a span of thirteen feet.
Yet the systematic development and combination of these new materials and methods, destined in the hands of Roman engineers to revolutionize architectural construction, still lay far in the future. The prestige of the past was overwhelming. The fourthcentury architects offered their successors no vision of new worlds to conquer. They bequeathed them nothing but a tradition, noble, indeed, and dignified, but stiffening into academic rigour, and already fatally touched with pretentiousness and vulgarity.
THE END .
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