READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE OF ROME |
ROME AND THE MEDITERRANEAN. 218-133 BC
CHAPTER XXI
HELLENISTIC ART
I
INTRODUCTION
THE authority on whom Pliny drew for
the chapters on art in his Natural History ended his account of
sculpture in Greece with the pupils of Lysippus. Pliny therefore tells us that
art died in the beginning of the third century, and did not come to life again
for a hundred and fifty years. When we remember that this period covers the
activities of the Pergamene school amongst others, we may wonder whether he is
saying exactly what he means. But we do know that his statement is intended to
refer to the break-up of the mainland schools at that time, and however untrue
in particular it may be to declare the succeeding century and a half a void,
much of the time old Greece was silent. Her artists, widening a movement which
had begun in the fourth century, followed the flow of wealth and power
eastwards, and were to be found as single masters or in small groups executing commissions
for the new kings, for the new cities which now sprang up, or for those among
the old cities which now throve luxuriantly. This dispersal makes the task of
the historian of art difficult. From time to time new schools were formed, made
up of various elements, yet producing works of one style: but more often a
single sculptor would carve or cast a statue in a city of which he was not a
native, and, leaving it, would leave us nothing but a name, or a nameless copy
of his work. Knowledge, too, was now more accessible than before, and one is
likely to find, instead of a consistent development, reminiscence of several
styles, which renders it impossible, in the absence of a signature or other
external evidence, to say to what school the sculptor of such an eclectic work
belongs. Stylistic comparison, one of the most trustworthy guides to the
classification of works of art, thus begins to fail at the same time as
literary evidence; and the virtual stereotyping of alphabetical forms robs
inscriptions of much of their chronographical value.
These difficulties, and the consequent
absence of a reasonably certain chronological arrangement and classification,
may have contributed to the neglect with which Hellenistic art has until lately
been treated. Today it is hardly necessary to insist on the importance of
studying it, not only for itself but also in its bearings on that which succeeded. For the art of Rome is the direct
heir, not of the fifth century nor even of the fourth (though there were
fashions for works of these centuries among her connoisseurs and classical
revivals besides that of Hadrian); but of the living tradition of Hellenistic
art, modified in its new surroundings and embodying strong native elements, yet
still a continuous development. One cannot determine the precise artistic
importance of Roman monuments without knowing the Hellenistic age, although
one may derive aesthetic pleasure from them, just as one cannot fully
understand, although one can enjoy, Virgil without knowing Homer; and not only
Homer, but Theocritus.
Hellenistic art has often been called
decadent. If by decadence is meant a falling-off in technique, a loss of
vitality, or a tendency to shirk difficulties, then, to speak generally, the
charge does not hold. If it means imitating old fashions without improving on
them, examples of it can be found then, as at almost any other time. The real
difficulty in which sculptors most of all, architects to some degree, and
painters far less, now found themselves, was this:—the past centuries had been
too comprehensive in their success, and had exhausted most of the subjects
available, while the new political and material conditions had not created
corresponding demands for new kinds of dedications calling for new art-forms,
nor supplied new subjects. Sculpture suffers particularly because it is
comparatively limited in its repertory; and when technique has been perfected,
a style worked out to its climax, and the range of subjects genuinely
exhausted, some kind of revolution must occur before significant works of art
are again produced in any number.
One thing at least the fifth and
fourth centuries had bequeathed to sculptors, a superb technical skill, not
forgotten for many a generation. There is naturally a change in the spirit which
animates it: in these three centuries before Christ works by Pheidias are not
to be expected, just as one does not expect another Aeschylus or another
Socrates. The only questions one is entitled to ask are ‘How far are these
works original?’ and ‘Are they good, in their kind?’ We are not primarily
concerned with the comparative value of various kinds.
II.
ATHENIAN SCULPTORS IN THE
EARLY HELLENISTIC AGE; ALEXANDRIA
Let us look first at Athens, which,
one is inclined to think, with no rich patron to stimulate her, will have
fallen into the second rank. But when the evidence is examined, it will be found
that even if there were not many commissions in Athens itself, and although
some executed there are of no high quality, yet Athenians, with their great
technical skill, were still playing a large part elsewhere in the Greek world,
and the best of her home-keeping sculptors could produce splendid work when
occasion demanded, at least until the middle of the third century. There is, it
is true, a tendency towards an academic style, at its best among gentle or even
romantic emotions, and somewhat out of place in vast scenes of tragedy. But it
would be surprising not to find some such reaction after the brilliance of the
fourth century, and even if the general failure of ambitious ideal sculpture
seems to show that ideals had become the business of philosophers, the
Athenian sculptor set to make a portrait—if we do not hold portraiture to be a
separate art—acquits himself well and is not dominated by the past. Attainment
is uneven, but how can it fail to be so at any period, when we judge it not
only by its great masters, but by anything we may happen to have left to us, no
matter from how mean a workshop it proceeded ?
Of the sculpture found in Athens itself
the most important is a colossal head of Ariadne from the south
slope of the Acropolis, which may be dated about the end of the fourth century:
a diluted blend of Scopas and Praxiteles, like the imperfectly animated Niobid
group by the same artist, the authorship of which puzzled ancient critics. Such
a style is more at home in a statue representing Selene as she sinks towards
Latmus, the soft vertical lines of her dress imitating her subdued
radiance, a kind of rendering rarely found, or at least rarely found so
obvious. The statue of Dionysus seated, from the monument of
Thrasyllus, probably of 271 bc, is
a conscientious piece of work and sufficiently monumental, but it lacks
first-hand feeling, its grandeur being derived from a tradition which has overwhelmed
the tenuous spirit of the sculptor. In the Themis by Chaerestratus,
of some years before, emptiness of expression stands for impartiality,
stiffness for uprightness. The unintelligent repetition of stock formulae for
drapery, hair and features, is the sculptor’s substitute for fresh observation
of the material means by which the goddess might have been embodied. A sapless
stick—and the unexpected incidents in the drapery, which are intended to give
life, hang on it like abortive leaves. Chaerestratus would not have been a
great sculptor even in a great period: here he puts forth crude borrowings
from masters of the last generation.
The genuine tradition of Praxiteles
seems to have been kept alive by his sons Cephisodotus and Timarchus, to one of
whom may be due a pleasing head (known in a copy at Taranto) which
possesses a girlish freshness and a distinct personality rather in the sense of
the earlier head from Chios. The two sons collaborated in a
portrait of Menander set up in the theatre at Athens about 290: and its head is
thought to have been identified in many copies. One other portrait, of a decade
later, may be mentioned—a masterpiece—the statue of Demosthenes by Polyeuctus.
It shows a power of characterization, not only in the head but in body, limbs,
and drapery (the much worn, much washed, much fingered himation, whether
invented or historical, is as subtle as the rest), which will bear comparison
with anything which had preceded it.
A statue which, though commissioned
for Alexandria, may have been the work of a sculptor from Greece proper and perhaps
from Athens, is the colossal Nile, of which there is a copy (much restored in
details) in the Vatican. Nile, with rippling hair and beard, lies against the
Sphinx, displaying a broad smooth body at the same time fluent and monumental,
and looks back towards the hills, yearning, like all water-beings, for
intercourse with the constant earth. The sixteen cubits of his yearly rise lie
in the swirling folds of his cloak, lap his feet, caressing the animals he
shelters, climb, and pause, and scale at last his full height, to crown him and
sit proudly among his and their yield of corn and fruits. A pretty enough
allegory, and, even if rather obvious, worked out with humour.
In Alexandria the cult of Sarapis was
promoted by Ptolemy Philadelphus, who commissioned one Bryaxis to execute the
colossal cult-statue. Copies of this on a small scale—and varying in detail,
because the size of the image prevented the making of casts—are numerous,
having been used no doubt in private shrines: one at Alexandria itself seems to
give a fair general notion of the original, and Clement of Alexandria has left
an account of the great richness of the statue, and of the various metals and
precious stones employed. Its colouring was gloomy: its jewelled eyes
mysterious. Cerberus, his make-up more monstrous than ever, is to the fore,
louring. In Egypt the more awful aspects of the cult will not have been
neglected.
Both Nile and Sarapis were probably
the work of recent immigrants. There must have been many such, where there was
constant demand for sculpture, but we have no evidence that, either by
themselves or in combination with those already established, they evolved a
distinctive homogeneous style, that they maintained a general standard high
enough to serve as a hotbed for occasional masterpieces, or that they
contributed much to art save some excellent grotesques, mostly small bronzes,
and from time to time one or two good portraits.
III.
THE PUPILS OF LYSIPPUS AND
THE RHODIAN SCHOOL
We now turn to the school of Lysippus,
some of whose many pupils were still engaged at Sicyon in the production of the
kind of works for which there was always a steady demand—victorious athletes,
charioteers with their teams, and other votive statues— in a watered version of
his style, by the aid of the technical processes, including plaster casts, which
he and his brother Lysistratus had brought to perfection; while others were
carrying his manner and methods to various parts of the Greek world. Chares, of
Lindus, made for the city of Rhodes, after its repulse of Demetrius Poliorcetes
in 305 and from the sale of his abandoned siegetrain, that bronze colossus of
the sun-god, a hundred feet high, which became one of the seven wonders of the
ancient world. It stood for fifty-six years, was then overthrown by an
earthquake, destroying many houses in its fall; remained, fallen, to stir men’s
wonder for another thirteen hundred years, and finally passed out of history,
sold for its metal to a Jew, on a caravan of nine hundred and eighty camels.
It has left few traces save in
literature and, in faint reflections, on coins, but a short account which we
possess of its erection bears witness to a high degree of technical skill, and
its example evoked many more colossi in Rhodes, which now became a great centre
for bronze-founding, and the home of a flourishing school of statuary.
Unfortunately we know little of it except names, and are obliged to argue back
from its later productions. Some of the works soon to be mentioned as of
Lysippic descent may well have been made there, but the increasing mobility of
sculptors and ideas renders it increasingly difficult to fix a style down to a
particular place. A rich city anywhere acts as a magnet for various sculptors.
They are bound at this time less than ever before by the tradition of one
school: knowledge of other styles than that of their own teacher is widespread,
and inspiration may be drawn at second-hand from many sources.
One or two convenient fixed points we
have.
Starting with the Apoxyomenos, which
may be dated approximately by the resemblance of the head to some of the coinportraits
of Demetrius Poliorcetes, we come next to a statue closely resembling it, a boy
praying, now in Berlin, which may be a copy of the adorans by Boedas, a
pupil of Lysippus. It testifies to careful study of a model, though it is far
from being so free from convention as Lysippus himself seems to have claimed:
nevertheless there certainly is here a more direct attempt to imitate soft
young flesh, and less dependence on the traditional divisions of musculature,
than we have yet seen. Another fixed point is the group made by Eutychides,
pupil of Lysippus, for the city of Antioch on the Orontes, presumably soon
after its foundation in 300, of the Tyche of the city crowned by Seleucus and
Antiochus. Eutychides is described by ancient writers as a Sicyonian: most of
his recorded works were dedicated in Greece itself, and he certainly remained
at Sicyon long enough to instruct a pupil; whence it is dangerous to assume
that his commission in Antioch led to the establishment there of a school with
Lysippic traditions. For a full understanding of the group itself (or rather of
the figure of Antioch, for trustworthy copies of that alone remain) a few words
are needed on the stage of development which it helps to date and illustrate.
Lysippus had been making statues of women which differ from the Praxitelean in
having the clothes stretched rather than draped upon them. Patterns are thus
produced to which the body serves as a background, and, in addition, sometimes
a series of external patterns, complementary to those on the body, is formed by
stretching loose ends of drapery across the figure in a more forward plane or
letting them hang, such schemes being facilitated by the use of bronze, a
material of high tensile strength. The idea is, as we shall see, then carried
farther, and statues are produced which, in their sacrificing of probability to
the desire for particular shapes, are comparable to those of the Italian
baroque.
To speak generally, the dress of the
archaic korai was abstracted pattern, showing a tendency to neglect
fresh study of the real garment: the statues of the fifth century were women,
their clothes worn naturally, the artist making a discreet selection and adjustment
of normal incidents; those of the fourth century mannequins, pinned into the
fashion of the day; while those of the progressive Hellenistic schools are
lay-figures, their draperies here looped, there stretched on their inelastic
limbs. If they are still, one shrinks from anticipating their movement: if they
are represented moving, one cannot picture them still. For to the basis of the
lay-figure the sculptor is apt to add from his imagination or his memory flying
pieces of drapery which would embarrass the runner were she to stop, and seated
figures have loose ends lying about them the fall of which, if they were to
stand, could not be foretold. Again there is a searching for pattern, but more
conscious than in archaic days. Yet there are many Hellenistic statues which
do not conform to these generalizations: the age was one both of experiment and
of reaction, and we are constantly being surprised by fresh study of nature,
and by dry memories of the past.
The Antioch of Eutychides, then, forms
a convenient index to the problems with which many sculptors were at this time
occupied. The best copies of the figure show us a sleek girl seated
broadly on a rock, in an attitude the contortion of which only reveals itself
on close study. At her foot a youth, the river Orontes, plunges impetuously
along: of another river-god by Eutychides, the Eurotas, ancient epigrams exclaim
that it is more liquid than water, thus betokening a mimetic tendency such as
we have already seen in the statue of Selene: but our copies of Orontes tell us
little. The drapery of the demigoddess, in which the different materials are
faithfully rendered, is stretched and looped elaborately across the figure and
over the rock, so that we are presented not only with the interest of lines
running in a number of different directions, and not only with the contrast
between smooth and crinkly, but also with that between taut and loose, straight
and curved, dry and full; to which confection the rendering of laundry-creases
is intended to give additional piquancy. Now at last there is a full, conscious
attempt to work out the composition for many points of view, one of the first
preoccupations of the modern, which had not before been forced upon sculptors
because most statues were made to be set up with sides and back away from the
spectator. Even in the fourth century there are many works in which lateral and
even three-quarter views have been little considered, and many which, like the
Hermes of Praxiteles, compose well from one point, the frontal, well enough
from a second, third, or fourth, and poorly from the others.
The Apoxyomenos, we may recall, is for
us the link between old and new. It carried on the tradition of the standing
athletic statue, but broke away from it with the bold projection of its right
arm into the third dimension, just as the Lansdowne Hermes, which also has the
new proportions, small head and wiry limbs, translated an old motive from two
dimensions into three. But not all Hellenistic sculptors who set about making
statues to be viewed from every aspect always succeeded in doing so. The copy
of another, younger Tyche (Tyche is popular in an age of changing fortunes),
perhaps also by Eutychides, illustrates a partial failure; charming though she
is, the line of the back when seen from her left sags in a curiously frog-like
way. One of the most successful compositions of this time and school is the boy
taking a thorn from his foot, not the famous bronze of the Capitol, which gives
only the body, and owes its head of inconsistent style to Roman taste, but the
marble copy (the original was of bronze) in London, where the urchin has his own
head. The seated Hermes fromjHerculaneum, which resembles it in
many ways, fails in one view, that from his left, whence the back looks
excessively heavy, and has legs (partly restored) which would appear too long
if he stood up, an interesting contrast in this particular to the old
two-dimensional type of seated figure, which usually has thighs too short for
nature in order to make a frontal view tolerable. The statue of Hermes is on
the whole a successful personification of supple lightness and speed: and the
Lysippic school, with its tradition of athletic statues, is naturally happy in
its representation of the naked male figure. The heads generally show little
evidence of mental life: these and the dry, highly-trained bodies we may
suppose characteristic of the athletes of the day.
The Victory found at
Samothrace and now in the Louvre is one of the great monuments of
this age, and a faithful reflex through one of its facets. The divergence of
centuries between the dates proposed for it shows how weak internal evidence
can be for dating and classifying in a period when more than a few lines of
development are being followed and when old fashions can be adopted at will. It
is treated here because of the fragment of an inscription found with it, though
since lost, which can hardly have been anything but the signature of the
sculptor, since there was no other building near to which it could belong. It
was formerly thought that this monument, like the coins issued by Demetrius
Poliorcetes, which also bear the device of Victory on a prow, commemorated the
naval victory of 306 bc off
Salamis in Cyprus. But Samothrace was in enemy hands then and for years after. Nor do any of the
coin-dies show evidence of having been actually copied from the statue: not
only will the position of the arms have been different, but the drapery on the
coins is that of an ordinary running figure conceived and worked out in the
manner of the fourth century, with no hint of the alighting movement of the
statue. In face of these arguments, another occasion for the dedication has
been sought, and Studniczka has proposed the decisive event of the Second
Syrian War, the battle of Cos (c. 258 bc), in which the triple alliance of Antigonus, Antiochus II and Rhodes was
victorious over Ptolemy II. This explains the general resemblance to the coins,
for the statue thus becomes a dedication of filial piety by Antigonus; it
explains, as is pointed out above, the erection on Samothrace, otherwise
inexplicable in the third century and with difficulty explicable in the second.
For Samothrace was Arsinoe’s island, captured in this Second Syrian War by
Antiochus. At Cos Antigonus was taking revenge for the Chremonidean War, and
Antiochus for his father’s losses in the First Syrian War, in both of which
Arsinoe’s influence had been dominant. And it justifies the commissioning of a
Rhodian artist; while the date seems more suitable for the style than any yet
proposed.
It may be urged that the date is
unimportant for the appreciation of it as a work of art. But even if it gains
no more aesthetic significance from being dated, it gains interest as the work
of a member of the Rhodian school of this time, and for the comparison it
affords with the work which Pergamene sculptors were soon to produce. It has
been shown that the coins of Demetrius represent Victory on a despoiled prize,
a parallel to the common representation, especially common at this time, of
Victory setting up a trophy of captured armour. But the Samothracian monument,
like Antigonus’ dedication of his flagship, instead of hulks, on Delos, refines
this motive. Cos was fought during the Isthmia, and here Victory brings to the Isthmia, the victorious flagship, the Isthmian victor’s crown. No longer the calm
messenger of Olympus, but the stormy partisan, her feet now touch deck, and
poised, with wings still beating, she is carried on with the onward surge of
the vessel, the breeze driving the cloak against and across her tense forward
leg and eddying in the light folds of her dress. The figure is strongly built;
the powerful wings suggest more successfully than ever before organic articulation
with the body, and are ably balanced by the deep breasts and massive chest. An
extremely clever study of body and drapery combined in movement: solid and
bright on the one side; fluttering, shadowy, almost feathery on the other;
finical perhaps in some details, but still without detriment to the main
conception, which, with its bold transverse bars of shadow and great upward
wrench from the waist, as of one flung hither and thither by the currents of
battle and then torn by main force from the enemy, is highly sensational,
because violent emotion was to be expressed.
A further development in drapery which
may have culminated in the Rhodian school about 200 bc, is that of making the folds of the under-garment show
through the upper, a subtle inversion of flavour from the old heavy cloak fully
masking or fully revealing the chiton. Matron and maiden from Herculaneum show the first traces of the new fashion. A figure in relief from the
altar of the temple of Athena Polias at Priene, though not necessarily later,
is in a more advanced stage, and proves that the tendency goes back at least to
the beginning of the third century, if not to the end of the fourth; while the
climax is reached in a statue from Magnesia now in Constantinople. But at
Pergamum, in the early second century, on the great frieze transparent
over-drapery does not occur: on the smaller frieze it is used discreetly. We
must therefore assume either that it was fallingout of fashion or that it was
not yet perfected when they were carved. And when we remember that it was never
an exclusive style, others everywhere appearing beside it, and that it was not
Pergamene in origin; that extreme renderings like the statue from Magnesia were
probably abnormalities without wide vogue, and that our evidence points to the
beginnings of the fashion a century before—then we may be persuaded that it was
reaching its full development during the third century, and shall probably not
be far wrong in assigning a statue of Polyhymnia, in other ways
related to the two Tychai by Eutychides, but with transparent over-drapery, to
the end of that century.
The origins of the groups of Muses of
which we have copies are extremely uncertain, and although the head of another
Muse is illustrated here for its sweet but not cloying beauty, no direct
connection with that of Polyhymnia is implied. Brother of Polyhymnia is a
satyr boy (several copies of a lost original furnish his various parts) who,
having just discovered the existence of his tail (tail-consciousness doubtless
being one of the concomitants of satyric pubescence), twists himself round in
order to gain a glimpse of it, and smiles whimsically at the perverse fate
which will never grant full success to his efforts. The motive may seem
trivial, but shows genuine feeling, and the movements of the lithe young body
are carefully studied and expressed. The warmth of the modelling and the
elasticity both of the taut abdomen and of the folds on the back are equally
admirable. Here (with a spiral composition) the silhouettes are not especially
satisfying: more noticeably than, for example, in the Hermes resting, the
beauty of the various aspects depends on a steady consciousness of the third
dimension, into which eye and mind are continually being led.
No account, however short, of the
activities of the Rhodian school can close without reference to two famous
works of art connected with Rhodes.
The punishment of Dirce, a group made
at the end of the second century bc by Apollonius and Tauriscus of Tralles (adopted sons of one of the sculptors of
the great Pergamene frieze) for the city of Rhodes, has survived in a much
restored and altered copy of the third century ad. It is an attempt to represent plastically a group of persons, a bull, and a portion
of the surrounding country. Its success is with difficulty estimated owing to
the fragmentary condition of the piece. All we can say is that though the views
from all points have been considered by the sculptor, and an approximately
pyramidal composition attained by poising some of the figures ingeniously on
rocks (as in another group of the time which has been discovered at Pergamum),
one main aspect is intended.
On the other hand the group
of Laocoon and his sons, by Agesander, Athenodorus and Polydorus of Rhodes, is
designed like a relief and intended to be set against a wall. The proportions
of the limbs are adjusted for this purpose in such a way that the exaggeration
is not obvious in a frontal view, though some uneasiness may be felt about the
size of the torso. Of the aesthetic significance of the group, which Pliny has
not been alone in ranking unhesitatingly as the greatest work of art in the
world, it is difficult to speak, so detached do we now feel from its horror.
Its spirit seems most like that of the second Attalid dedication at the end of
the first Pergamene school, though it has something in common with the great
frieze of the altar: actually it is at least a hundred years later than either.
In judging it we must discount patching and retouching, which have spoilt both
the compactness and the swing of the composition by raising Laocoon’s right arm
too high, and have intruded several discordant details. But the main conception
we are able to estimate with reasonable accuracy: and the contrast between the
mighty straining of the grown man, tried to the utmost, and the tense
elasticity of the elder son which acts as a foil to it and to the crumpled body
of the younger, will not fail of their effect. Nor can we disregard the
unsurpassed technical skill, even when we are asking ourselves what there is
besides.
IV.
THE FIRST PERGAMENE SCHOOL
The struggle between the Pergamene
kingdom, under Attalus I, and the Gauls, was not the first occasion in Greek
history when a desperate war had been accompanied by a blossoming of great and
austere sculpture. In Greece proper the end of the Persian Wars of the early
fifth century witnessed such a phenomenon; and there can be little doubt that
in Pergamum the cathartic effects of a period of trial followed by the call for
commemorative monuments, together with the provision of new subjects, gave the
needed stimulus to an art which, efficient enough technically, tended to lack a
supply of significant material and a high and serious purpose.
The name First Pergamene school has
been given to a group of sculptors who produced, between 240 and 225 bc, the great thanksgiving dedications
for the victories of Attalus I over Antiochus and the Gauls. Fragmentary
inscriptions from the bases of these have been found at Pergamum, which,, when
brought into relation with a statement of Pliny, seem to show that Isigonus was
one of the sculptors, and perhaps Antigonus another, for these two names are
among the four given by him for the dedications of Attalus and Eumenes, and the
endings -gonus of two signatures have been preserved.
The groups themselves, scenes of
battle, are best known to us from the dying Gaul of the Capitol, the statue
(from the Ludovisi collection, now in the Museo delle Terme) of a Gaul who, at
bay, turns the sword against himself after having killed his wife, the head of
a dead man in Asiatic headdress, a torso at Dresden, a head at Cairo, as well
as many other fragments. They may have been made soon after the originals themselves,
and though they vary in excellence and cannot reproduce fully the original
freshness of touch, yet, as copies, they reach a high level.
The original statues evidently
embodied close studies of racial types and of muscular action, rest and motion being
carefully differentiated. There is, generally, a spareness in the modelling,
and the planes tend to be large and flat with dry hollows; as though
representing a skin like hide, stretched over a frame meagrely padded, far
different from the thin skin which comes of a genial climate, and covers the
rippling evenly-developed musculature of the Greek in the convention of the
fourth-century sculptors. In proportions the figures are somewhat less slender
than the Lysippic, though the heads would seem small were it not for their long
wild hair. The conceptions (and it should be noticed that even from the copies
some differences in the personalities of the sculptors may be deduced) show a
tendency to the ostentatious mitigated by the soberness and sympathy with which
emotion is delineated in the faces. There are no traces of any attempt to
belittle the enemy. In the compositions the use of bronze has encouraged
considerable freedom: there is no hesitation in representing great strides,
unsupported limbs, or hanging drapery; and bold projections and recessions are
not avoided. Altogether a series in which high technical ability, invention,
and fresh anatomical study supplementing a traditional scheme are still the
means of expressing aesthetic emotion.
A dedication of about the
same date as the first Pergamene symbolizes through an old Phrygian myth the
victory of culture over barbarism, whence we may suppose that it was set up
somewhere in the Pergamene kingdom and refers to the Attalid repulse of the
Gauls. This myth had been treated before in Greek art, but never in such a way
as to suggest its horror. Myron’s bronze group, made about the middle of the
fifth century, showed the first incident, where Athena flings away the
disfiguring pipes: from a design of Praxiteles, or, as some will have it, by
his grandson, the second, that of the contest between Apollo and Marsyas, was
modelled in relief; Apollo waiting, Marsyas piping madly: and now the third,
the penalty, is represented by a group of three figures, the god seated, the
Silen bound by hands and feet to a tree, and the flayer crouching
to whet his knife. The statue of Apollo is preserved only in a
torso and a sketch on a marble disk: he sits almost languidly, his arm over his
head: Marsyas, half-animal resigned to an unintelligible fate, yet belongs to a
higher type than the barbarous Scythian, who looks up with dull wonder and a
hint of pity. Even here, though there is a pathos lacking in the earlier
representations of the subject, the physical horror is inherent, not explicit.
It remained for the next generation to make Marsyas fully human and fully
conscious of the coming torture, to simulate the straining body with
red-streaked marble, to elaborate swollen veins and sweat- drenched hair, and
so to transform the drama from tragedy into Grand Guignol.
This later phase of the first
Pergamene school we are helped to define by another great dedication of Attalus
I, a series of bronze statues, under life-size, set up on the parapet of the
Acropolis at Athens at the end of the century. Greeks, Gauls, Amazons,
Persians, Giants and Gods were the subjects, and if the copies we have are
typical, they were represented in every conceivable attitude of
violent attack, defence, pain, death and terror. Epigonus may be the sculptor
responsible for that extreme of pity where her child seeks its milk at the
breast of a dead Amazon. Throughout, no device to stir the spectator is
neglected. Yet he is left, in the main, cold and detached.
The grouping, now lost, no doubt helped
the effect. The figures are copies and have suffered in the copying and in the
translation from bronze to marble. Restorations and working-over have marred or
misrepresented actions and details. The small scale makes them remote from
reality. All this is true. But even so, are there not fundamental causes for
their failure? The sculptors of the first dedication will by now have been
passing. These are pupils or imitators, and they are overcome by their
inheritance. No thought can be perfectly expressed more than once. How
originate new feelings or new formulae when the same subjects have been
rendered in a masterly way not many years before ?
To disguise deficiency of feeling the
sculptors have expressed all they knew, keeping nothing in reserve and leaving
nothing to the imagination. And they have repeated the formulae twice as loud,
in the hope that they will be, if not twice, at least more than half, as
effective. The result is that the figures, with some exceptions, being occupied
not only with the fight but with the onlooker, attitudinize, and instead of
feeling genuine emotion, exhibit a conventional substitute for it.
But the torso of a warrior,
a Gaul whose helmet lies by his side, at Athens, from Delos, an
original contemporary with the second Pergamene dedication, is an astonishing
piece of work which gives us fuller understanding of both first and second
dedications. It is not in the taste of the fifth century nor yet of the fourth,
but of its kind it is excellent, and for sheer technical ability it is
unsurpassed. It helps us also to an appreciation of the group of Menelaus and
the dead Patroclus, and of the pendant, lately reconstructed, Achilles and
Penthesilea, which resembles in general construction the group of the Ludovisi
Gaul. The originals of these will have been made in the last quarter of the
third century. Both, known to us from copies only, depend for their effect on
the physiological contrast between tension and relaxation, and on the pathetic
contrast between the vibrant living body and the poor limp corpse; to which is
added, especially in the second group, a strong sentimental interest.
Statues of this date have been
criticized on the ground that they show too much of what lies beneath the
surface, as though they had been flayed, or that the modelling is too emphatic.
But it is not exactly that the skin appears to have been removed or that
convexes have been unduly inflated and hollows made unduly concave, though some
exaggeration of the contours may be detected: it is rather that certain
features have been brought further forward from the main mass than is
reasonable. The effect is not so much of normal strain, however great, as of a
kind of morbid protrusion.
The need of new subjects has already
been mentioned. The satyr, much favoured in the archaic age, fallen somewhat
into neglect in the classical, and perhaps over-humanized in the fourth
century, lives again now as an organic creature and becomes a vehicle of new
ideas. A satyr-world with its own life again springs up, more credible than the
world of gods, more interesting to the artist than yesterday’s fight with the
Gauls, which, even when Gauls were a new subject, closely resembled for the
most part those other fights so often and so well depicted for centuries. Thus
a large proportion of the tolerable Hellenistic statues represent satyrs. One,
which seems to be Pergamene of the later third century, is reproduced by the
dancing satyr from Pompeii: a masterpiece of rhythmic movement, to
which details like the snapping fingers, curling tail (more nervous no doubt in
the original) and tossing flamy beard all contribute. Its composition
exemplifies one of the schemes which tend to afford satisfactory views from
every point, that of the spiral: the plane of the legs swings into that of the
abdomen, and this in turn, retarded, slides into that of the chest and arms;
the spiral is checked and split by the two planes of the neck, one of which
accelerates while the other gently reverses it, and is capped by the head, a
well-poised finial. A similar plan is followed at the back with the planes of
legs, buttocks and shoulders. But the statuette is naturally susceptible of
many analyses, for a thousand thoughts have gone to its making; and this sketch
of one of the main schemes serves only as partial explanation of its
resiliency.
Then, too, as a kind of variation on
the main theme of the conflict between Greeks and barbarians, or Gods and
giants, come conflicts on a smaller scale, yet no less serious, of the satyrs
of Dionysus with giants (possibly though not probably belonging to the smaller
Attalid dedication), and the more intimate struggles between old satyr and
hermaphrodite, young satyr and nymph. Although the small satyrs who fight and
die in the coils of their snake-footed opponents reflect the heroic postures of
the Attalid dedications, the heads are close and clever studies of low types of
boy. But their agony is genuine enough. The other two groups are playful, one
might almost say innocent. The young satyr is an animal who takes his repulse
in good part. The hermaphrodite is simply a country girl, untroubled by moral
misgivings, though glad to escape from the inconvenient attentions of the old
satyr.
It is noteworthy that the scale and
subject of many of these pieces fit them for the decoration of a private house
or garden. In this individualistic and commercial age the call for purely
religious dedications loses strength; memorials of victory, of civic or royal
pride, are in demand, and precious pieces for the cabinets and shrines of
princes or wealthy private citizens.
V.
THE SECOND AND FIRST CENTURIES
The first half of the second century
is not marked by any falling-off of creative activity. New subjects, or
subjects regarded with new eyes, are now exploited: youth and age, complexes
like the hermaphrodite, ‘sweet marble monster of both sexes’, or the older Pan,
satyr, triton, centaur, are submitted to psychological as well as
physiological study, and are invested with a subtlety of meaning they have not
hitherto borne. Groups suggesting complex emotions are invented; introspection
thrives.
The
Pergamene kingdom and other flourishing cities, especially those of Asia
Minor, no doubt continued during this period to attract numbers of artists from
abroad. Inscriptions and literary records furnish the names of sculptors of
other schools than that which was flourishing at Pergamum, and some of their
works we can identify with probability: while we can also from time to time
detect other styles than the Pergamene in statues to which no name or
nationality can, on external evidence, be attached. One Polycles, of Athens,
made in bronze an hermaphrodite which met with the approval, passed on to us
by Pliny, of some ancient critic. The hermaphrodite apparently most often
copied is a delicately modelled figure, like a slender long-limbed woman, with
something of the monstrous in the tapering skull, who lies stretched prone,
stirring in an uneasy sleep. A copy in the Museo delle Terme in Rome seems to
preserve the touches which made the original bronze effective. The complicated
hair has a twisted band and a gem braided into it, its roots on the temples are
wiry, and it will have been executed with minute crisp chasing; the forehead,
brows, nose and mouth are worked out in flattish planes which pass into one
another at sharp angles, and the drapery is stretched in order to produce, for
the most part, flat or tubular folds of simple section, and narrow, sharp
hollows.
We may perhaps recognize here a copy
of the bronze of Polycles made about 200 bc (though there is little to tie the style to Athens), and we can give to the
same sculptor an Eros, superficially alike but subtly differentiated, supine,
easy, carefree; a saucy boy, his mischief sleep-surprised, like his ranging
hands. It is interesting to compare with this rendering of childhood the boy
made by Boethus of Chalcedon not many years later. There is about the same
degree of naturalism in the body, but the head of Eros, who seems the elder of
the two, is less dependent on tradition and shows more evidently the careful
study of a model. Boethus’ boy struggles with a goose, a common domestic pet in
a country where dogs were outcast, and the scene, like much of the modelling,
will have been taken direct from life. But it is by no means devoid of
monumental feeling, being broad and restrained, though at the same time not uninteresting.
Boethus was famous as a worker in metal, and a bronze fragment signed by him,
the support of a statue, has survived: from its nature a piece of conventional
archaism, it tells little of his own style but only of an excellent technique.
We have called the hermaphrodite
woman-like, but the feminine ideal of the time was rather the statue of which
the Capitoline Aphrodite is a copy, too succulent, or the bathing Aphrodite of
Doedalsas of Bithynia, too fleshy for modern taste. The motive of the first is
that of the Cnidian Aphrodite of Praxiteles, coarsened to vulgarity by a
century and a half of currency; that of the second is borrowed from the women’s
bath, whatever its ritual application: in attitude it resembles the slave in
the Marsyas group, and the one surviving head among the copies which shows any
appreciable style indicates that we are well on in the third century if not
already in the second.
Parallel to the study of children is
the study of old men and women; and often these, too, are presented humorously.
Myron of Thebes has left an inscription at Pergamum which may have belonged to
one of the Attalid dedications. But other traces of his work there are lost,
and he is known to us only by the copies of a statue, in bronze, of a drunken
old woman, set up at Smyrna. In the fable, the old woman sees the jar as an
image of herself:
O suavis anima! quale in te dicam
bonum
Antehac fuisse, tales cum sint reliquiae?
Hoc quo pertineat, dicet, qui me
noverit.
In the statue, the two are one. The
composition is something between pyramid and cone; the drapery cascades down
the sides into an agitated pool, so that the body appears to be floating, while
the head swims. The results of age have been studied, but there has been strict
selection and emphasis of details for the purpose of conveying certain effects,
and nothing like exact reproduction has been attempted.
From the groups we choose two music
lessons, Pan instructing Olympus and Chiron Achilles. Of the first, the copy in
Naples is most complete, but, being of the second century a.d. it does not afford trustworthy
evidence for the technique of the original. This is a new conception of Pan, no
longer a human being with accidental animal traits, but an entity terrifyingly
harmonious. Ingenious, even in the copies, are the contrasts between full
virility and tender boyishness, between rough shag, or lank hircine beard, and
rippling curls, between hoarse urgency and tremulous doubt. Adroit, the relief
of erotic strife cut, scholias- tically, on the pipes.
No less ingenious must have been the
contrasts in the companion group of the centaur Chiron teaching young Achilles
to play the lyre, now lost but for paintings and a good copy in marble of the
head of Chiron. See how, even in the head alone, his nature and something of
his history are sculptured: how the horse is suggested in the sensitive ears
and dilated nostrils (the clownish tip of the nose shown in the photograph was
modern and is now removed), in the loose strands on the back of the neck, and
in those below the right ear, which, mane-like, are tossed round with the
movement of the head: how the hair is thinning on the crown; how the tutor of
old heroes turns sharply, almost incredulous, with a wry look of mingled anger
and pain, at the discordant note struck by this young generation. We must
notice the technical freedom of the sculptor, and the facility with which he
now handles his masses in three dimensions. They are abstracted from nature
and treated, in the spirit of the baroque, as so much material for producing
effects. The right eyebrow sheers away in a spiral; the beard is pulled not
only from side to side, but backwards and forwards; the forehead is drawn this
way and that and corrugated arbitrarily.
The Pan and Chiron groups, judged on
internal evidence, were by the same sculptor: what external evidence there is
tells against their having been made by one Heliodorus, a Rhodian of the second
century, who, according to Pliny, made a group of Pan and Olympus; for the two
pendants are also mentioned by Pliny separately as being of unknown authorship.
However that may be, those we have been studying were made in the first half of
the second century and probably in the second quarter, and they seem to be the
product of a second Pergamene school with whose most pretentious monument we
now have to deal.
The medium admirably employed in the
two musical groups by a vigorous and interested mind in order to express a
living idea, proves spiritless in the hands of those set to represent an
old-fashioned subject which has, for them, no reality. Such is the Great
Frieze. The pageant creaks by entertainingly enough, animated by the
self-confidence of its highly-skilled manipulators. Each actor wears the
correct clothes, is furnished with the correct attributes, and goes through the
appropriate motions with the correct weapons. It is a triumph of virtuosity,
and as empty and humourless as only virtuosi could make it. There is no decay
of technique: indeed the handling of the marble is as skilful as it has ever
been, and more daring. The sense of design is strong. But the basic idea is not
believed, and therefore is not made believable. ‘The first boar that is well
made in marble should be preserved as a wonder. When men arrive at a facility
of making boars well then the workmanship is not of such value.’ The devices
which help to conceal the fundamental deficiency of inspiration need no
detailed analysis—the splendid wings deployed, the tumid muscles, the curly
snakes with jaws that snap, the woolly dogs, the pantomime lions. Nevertheless
the school of sculptors which produced the great frieze of the altar, reached,
in those statues found at Pergamum which may reasonably be attributed to it,
among some affectations and eccentricities, a living and consistent style,
which displays itself even in their copies of older works. If its statues are
not grand, most are grandiose. The bodies are full, strong and erect. The main
arrangements of drapery may be unduly artificial or merely conventional, but
there is often a rhythmic swirl in the smaller folds which, with the crisp
carving, saves them from dullness. Women’s heads are massive and sensuous,
with deep swimming eyes, and yearning mouths in which one sees the emotional
intake of breath. The sculptors have studied Scopas, but have combined with his
manner an impressionism carried further than by Praxiteles.
The great external frieze of the altar
may commemorate the battle of Magnesia, which greatly augmented the power of
Eumenes II, and may thus have been made soon after 190: other possible dates for
it are something under ten and something over twenty years later, to
commemorate victories over the Gauls. It may be that the external frieze
celebrates Magnesia, and the frieze within the columned hall of the altar one
of these later series of victories. Certainly the smaller frieze,
with its circumstantial account of the life of Telephus, the mythical founder
of Pergamum, is the innovator, and shows a narrative method which argues some
previous development. We must pause to examine what traces of this there may
be. The evidence is remarkably scanty, for most Hellenistic reliefs that have
survived are difficult to date, and many belong to old types which tell us
nothing. Nor is this the place to discuss the question of what influence predominates
in the various reliefs (mostly copies) which we do possess, in marble, in
stucco, and on the now popular vessels of precious metal. Sufficient to say
that, although a rough classification is not impossible, no completely
satisfactory localization has yet been carried out. There is a class of rural
scenes into which various landscape and architectural elements have been
introduced: some of these can be grouped as having the same origin; and there
are also smallergroups; but, generally speaking, each relief must be analysed
carefully by itself before being rigidly attached to one class.
We shall therefore confine ourselves
to a few remarks on the new
factors which are now apparent, and in order to make these clear we must look
back for a moment to the fifth century, where almost any relief will serve as
an example. There the scene was worked in from a front plane to a background
which actually varied in depth according to the sculptor’s eye, but ideally was
infinite. In the next stage, that of certain reliefs in the fourth century, the
figures seem to be built up on a given flat background. This, in theory, was
still unlimited in depth, was free air in which the figures stood; but when
working in this method it was difficult for the sculptor to fight free of the background
and suggest roundness where it did not actually exist.
The next stage is that which was
reached during the Hellenistic age. It may owe its origin to the increasing
fondness for groups, since the difficulty of working out the composition of a
group of two or more detached figures for many points of view seems to lead
back to the provision of a background and the relimitation to one aspect. It
was undoubtedly helped by painting. Relief thus might appear to be at the same
stage as in the fifth century, and the free figures to be paralleled by those
in a pediment. But in pediments the heavy cornices provided an ideal
background of shadow, and the need for relating it to the figures did not
arise. Now, the types created for free sculpture are offered a background:
which background also, if one may so express it, being in the round, must be
treated as part of the scene. And here are difficulties which have been
sometimes skilfully evaded but never completely overcome in marble, in spite of
the great assistance received from the discoveries made by painters. The
problem will be clearer if we take an example, a relief from Corinth probably of the third century. The traditional frame of columns
surmounted by entablature and roof-tiles, taken over complete from reliefs of
the late fifth century onwards: inside it a scene of sacrifice. A god and
goddess are seen against a curtain. To their altar comes a family of
worshippers.
Notice first the difficulties of
scale. The goddess is smaller than the god, not merely because she is younger,
but in order to suggest greater distance from the spectator; next come the man
and wife, represented, in accordance with tradition, on a smaller scale,
together with children and acolyte of appropriate sizes; and finally, against
the tree which bounds the composition on the left are seen two figures, of
onlookers or intending worshippers, on a smaller scale still, to suggest that
they are not yet approaching the altar. The two images on a distant column need
not concern us, since they are not brought into close enough relation with any
of the living figures for their size to be a matter of importance. But the
other discrepancies will be found disturbing. The mind can compass the divine
and human scales (it naturally makes its standard the human) and can tolerate
the difference between the god and his daughter. But what of the relation of
the various figures to the old and knotted plane-tree? A few more points call
for notice. The deities are sculptural types transferred direct to the relief.
The little distant onlookers are like terracotta statuettes taken bodily and
placed in the corner. Curtain and tree conveniently mask a landscape which
would need a number of pictorial devices to collate it with the main scene; and
it will constantly be found, from now onwards, that the sculptor uses wall or
curtain to block his background and bring his relief virtually into two main
planes again.
In the great frieze of the Pergamene
altar the designer has made his figures almost in the round, but has obscured
his background with bodies, wings and serpent coils. And the small frieze
accepts the condition of a landscape background only in part. As in many other
Hellenistic reliefs, some of its peculiarities and many of its faults arise
from a mistaken attempt to imitate painting. To this are due the frontal,
three-quarter, and profile heads not in the front plane, which lack rotundity
and appear to have been sliced off and mounted on a slab: and it shows itself
clearly in the perspective, in the different sizes of the figures and the
different levels at which they are set, and in the attempt to render figures or
objects in a farther plane, an attempt which will always fail because the
sculptor has not at his command those devices of light and shade which assist
the painter to represent distance, but is confined to a marble block which
cannot be cut back indefinitely, and cannot be given such a surface as will
suggest objects less clear because more distant. The position of this relief in
the columned hall even shows that it is, in a sense, the substitute for a
painting, and explains why the outer frieze departs less from sculptural
tradition. We do not find, and hardly expect to find, such innovations in
external friezes of the order, which merely follow the conventions and grouping
of the fourth century, though the figures are usually in rather higher relief.
The frieze of the temple of Artemis at Magnesia, to take but one example, is
nothing but so many yards of a stock wall-covering.
About the middle of the second
century, in the Peloponnese, a new sculptor, Damophon of Messene, came into
prominence. He had not full measure of either the exuberant self-confidence or
the skill of the Pergamene sculptors, and he is therefore more dependent than they
were on older models. His name stands out more than it should because of its
isolation and because some of the cities on the mainland could now again afford
to give commissions for imposing cult-statues. One of his groups, Demeter and
Kore enthroned and flanked by standing figures of Artemis and a local giant,
Anytus, has been excavated at Lycosura, and by the aid of these fragments a
colossal head in the Capitoline Museum at Rome has also been
identified as his. We thus possess ample material for passing a judgment on his
style, which, without imitating the Pergamene, is not yet entirely independent
of it. It also draws elements from masterpieces of the fourth and fifth
centuries. In the head of the Capitoline the broad oval face recalls Pheidias,
the eyes are short, wide-open, and more overhung by the brows than would have
been possible with him. The mouth is short, in the manner of the fifth century,
but more fleshy and set more seductively: the hair recalls older fashions, yet
could not belong to any time before its own. One wonders whether the sculptor
was trying to remember or trying to forget what his predecessors had done.
The general conceptions imitate those
of the cult-statues of the fifth century, in colossal scale, in corresponding
simplification of modelling, and probably in some attempt to reproduce the
effect of gold and ivory by giving a high polish to the surface of the flesh.
At Lycosura some of the drapery, cleverly worked in marble, copies richly
embroidered stuff: yet not directly: the sculptor seems to have in mind the
embossed and inlaid golden drapery of such statues as the Parthenos and the
Zeus of Pheidias. The rest of the drapery is feebly conceived and executed in a
niggling way: the limbs are structureless. Evidently the carving of these large
masses of marble was left to assistants, who no longer maintained a high
standard.
The adjective eclectic has been
applied to this kind of sculpture. If we use it we must be aware of its
meaning. Granted that there has been a selection of features from older
sculpture, we must still try to determine how far they are stolen bodily, how
far they are understood and fused into an organic whole; how far the new style
lives. In the work of Damophon the elements chosen were incongruous, and therefore
the results are inharmonious and not satisfying: but the effort to digest them
was far more conscientious than in the baser form of eclecticism which we shall
encounter in the first century bc. Thus the label eclectic must be attached with the consciousness that it may
cover varying degrees of crudity.
The work of Damophon is to some extent
symptomatic of a new movement widespread if not universal, sedulous study of
the past. The forms in which this study manifests itself may be said to be two,
which however graduate into one another—the borrowing of older elements which
are worked up into a more or less homogeneous but somewhat nerveless academic
style, and the borrowing of older types which are modified and worked out in
detail in the style of the day, which itself is inevitably though less
consciously influenced by the past, and so has more claim to be considered an
evolutionary growth, and generally shows greater vitality. To judge from what
remains the one form was prevalent on the mainland, the other outside it. There
is hardly a better example of this taking of an old type and modifying it than
the Aphrodite from Melos. The original was a statue at Corinth, of the late
fourth century: it is reproduced on coins, and the Venus from Capua in the museum
at Naples is a tolerably accurate Roman copy. It represented Aphrodite naked to
the waist, the shield of Ares propped on her thigh so as to hold her drapery,
admiring her beauty in its burnished surface. Before her stood Eros. It will at
once be noticed, even if the line of the plinth of the Capuan copy and the
coins did not indicate it, that this group was intended by the original
sculptor to be seen, ordinarily, from one view, that with the head of Aphrodite
almost in profile towards the right. The sculptor of the Melian statue (one ...sandros, Agesandros or Alexandros, son of Menides of Antioch on the Maeander)
in the mid-second century borrows the old type, obliterates Eros and the
shield, lowers the right arm to hold up the drapery, and the left to rest on a
tall column (with the hand holding an apple, the canting device of Melos),
broadens the hips and the modelling generally, poises the head differently,
modernizes the drapery and the composition, changes the point of view. The hair follows an old fashion when compared, for example, with the Pergamene head we
have illustrated or with those of the great frieze, but the shapes of eyes and
mouth have not been able to escape the new, though its principles are not fully
mastered, as we may see by the only partially successful rendering of the
half-open mouth. Each sculptor adds what he knows to the old types. One from
Ephesus, Agasias, made the statue of a warrior now in the Louvre. It is
Lysippic in inspiration, but is worked out with an extraordinary display of
anatomical knowledge.
At Athens, sculptors of less merit
give evidence of a similar study of the past, resulting in statues less
interesting even than those of Damophon. The head of Athena, from a
large monument by Eubulides of the second half of the second century, comes
near being an exact copy of an earlier statue, while the body of Victory from
the same monument shows some attempt at original work; but it lacks any force
in the main design, and the details resolve themselves into the meaningless
repetition of a few commonplaces.
No promising growth was cut short by the sack of Corinth in 146, which flooded Rome with masterpieces and helped to create that demand for Greek art among Roman connoisseurs which, by keeping alive schools of competent craftsmen both in Rome and in Greece itself, was partially responsible for the production of a few not unpleasing pieces and of a host of mediocrities and worse. Athens now became the home of factories whose object was to supply the Roman market. Their products were not of one class only. Straight copies of various statues, chiefly those old masterpieces still remaining in Greece, were in demand; fancy versions were also made. A specialty was the so-called neo-Attic relief, a large class varying in both quality and subject. One of its series includes Dionysiac processions, usually maenads and satyrs, sometimes Pans and Silens, or nymphs with fluttering draperies, carved in a frankly decorative manner. Earlier votive reliefs usually furnished the models for these; sometimes even architectural sculptures. Another series (which was to grow excessively in the early years of the Roman Empire) was the archaistic. Something like it had been known as far back as the fifth century bc (and after the archaic age the tendency is seldom absent everywhere), but it now sprang up again with great vigour. At its lowest it consists in the use of a number of supposed archaic formulae, polished to excess—affected gestures, swallow-tail drapery, tip-toe gait, exaggerated slenderness—applied again and again to series of figures (identifiable only by their attributes) ranged in meaningless procession. At its best it gives some simple scene—a god standing in his sanctuary, for instance—executed in a somewhat archaic manner, although the attitudes may be far from archaic. The marble furniture on which these reliefs are often found borrows motives from many centuries. Statues in archaistic style, though less common, are not rare. Probably at this time another group of
Athenians (and there are parallels from other centres of art) were turning out
statues like the torso Belvedere (signed by Apollonius, son of Nestor), and the
bronze boxer of the Terme on whose glove the signature of the same artist has lately been found. The
idiom employed here is not entirely original and not spontaneous enough to
beget full harmonies. But they are genuine attempts at new creations, and we
cannot deny them a restrained and suggestive modelling, brightened by vivid
touches of fresh observation which the sculptor’s double sympathy, for past and
present, has enabled him to graft on to the older stock.
Other sculptors meanwhile were
fulfilling local commissions at or near Athens itself, such as the large but
uninspired relief at Eleusis dedicated by Lacrateides about 100, wholly
dependent on the past, with no evidence of the study of nature, and burking the
problem of depth in relief by its arbitrary arrangement of figures at different
levels without regard for perspective; and the Caryatids (one now in the
Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge) from the propylaea at Eleusis, of some fifty
years later, which are crisply carved in a dry, rather similar style. At Rome,
too, factories for sculpture were being formed. Pasiteles, writer on art, sculptor
and metal-worker, realized the artistic possibilities of clay-modelling, his
followers, perhaps he as well, the commercial. Arcesilaus, his contemporary,
made clay models and sold them for wholesale reproduction. The work of
Pasiteles himself is not known to us, but only that of Stephanus his pupil and of the pupil of Stephanus, Menelaus. We have had occasion to
speak of the half-unconscious imitation of older models, and of the frank
employment of pseudo-archaic conventions in the commonplace pieces of the
neo-Attic school. This is a baser kind of eclecticism. These are not copies of
earlier works, though all the elements are old. To judge by what we have of
him, it was early classical statues which Stephanus chiefly selected for
misuse: a little adjustment of the limbs in the direction of greater elegance
and of the features in that of so-called refinement, a little tampering with
proportions, a little sugaring over, and the thing could be passed off as a new
creation. Sometimes it is combined with its fellows in groups of a vapid sentimentality.
Compared with the bronze boxer this kind of statue is dead and meaningless. It
results from a classical revival, accompanied by the usual mistaken belief that
it is possible toimitate form without understanding it, and followed by the
customary confusion between the classical and the academic.
Better in some ways than the boy of
Stephanus, or at least with more claim to originality, is the big group by
Menelaus in the Terme, with its reminiscences of various periods. But stolen
goods are difficult to handle, and there is ludicrous discord in the scale:
either Orestes is undergrown or Electra a giantess.
We may conclude this survey with a
word on portraits. Throughout these three centuries portraiture (if we except
that of women) never failed to reach a high level. The selection of coins in
the Volume of Plates (164) may serve to give some idea of its widespread
excellence; the two or three heads in the round are taken from many
of almost equal merit, and the last, the head of Pompey, for its
characterization, for interest without excessive detail, and for generalization
without dullness, is worthy to stand beside any of its predecessors.
We have already mentioned the statue
of Demosthenes, and the interrelation of its parts. Whenever the
bodies of these Hellenistic portrait statues are preserved, it will be found
that they not only harmonize with the main conception of the character of the
subject, but enrich and elucidate it.
VI.
PAINTING
Painting, at the beginning of the
Hellenistic age, is in a very different situation from sculpture. Sculpture had
gone far towards exhausting its always limited repertory: painting had not
explored half its sphere. Sculpture had had at its disposal since its first few
years every important medium; at the end of the fourth century it had mastered
almost every technical device: painting had been limiting itself to a few
methods, and a few colours, and had not grasped the full possibilities of
tonality. Since sculpture had taken three centuries or more to realize fully
the third dimension, although its medium was tridimensional, it is no surprise
that painting had not long achieved the rendering of the human figure in space
and was only half way towards one of the solutions of spatial as against
two-dimensional composition. Thus with new possibilities and new problems to
interest him, the Hellenistic painter is not driven, like the sculptor, to the
elaboration of old technique or to the search for new subjects.
Painting had been in constant touch
with sculpture and it still derives some of its types thence. But to speak
generally, we are in a painter’s world, and though the old sculptural monumentality and the old expressive contours are not forgotten, the grouping of
figures, their relations in space, and their colouring are now the dominant
interests. On the other hand, landscape, as we think of it, is not yet
conceived.
Our information is mainly derived from
wall-paintings of Roman period, chiefly at Pompeii and Herculaneum, which many
times clearly misrepresent the Greek originals which they copy; and we are
therefore limited to the consideration of comparatively few, namely those
which we have reason to believe are accurate reproductions of masterpieces. More
or less worthless versions of great pictures, and worthless versions of what
seem mediocre pictures abound. These we are obliged to leave aside.
Of the masterpieces we select first
one of the third century, that of Achilles in Scyros, known to us best from a
Pompeian reproduction, how accurate we cannot altogether tell. The
story is that of how Achilles’ mother Thetis hid him among the daughters of
Lycomedes, how Odysseus and Diomedes, disguised as merchants, made their way
into the palace, and displayed the divine armour made for him by Hephaestus,
how at a sign the trumpeter blows the alarm; Achilles, forgetful of his part,
leaps instinctively to arms and is seized by his comrades, while Dei- dameia
starts back in alarm and Lycomedes looks up to heaven. This, the very climax of
the action, is the moment chosen by the painter. We cannot do more than point
out some of the means by which he has been able to represent it successfully.
The scene takes place against an architectural background, columns, curtains,
open doors—night outside—with a guard, he too part of the architecture, before
each of the two central columns. The centre (part of the picture is missing on
the left) of this upper and further stage (for the scene is arranged in two
principal planes) is held by Lycomedes; and his sceptre and the staff of
Odysseus, with which it is parallel, serve to relate the two and to make a
diagonal division in space which encloses the two main actors and counteracts a
certain centrifugal tendency in the subject.
We may notice a few other points: the
patterns and expressions of arms and legs, the use of shields, behind as a
repeating geometrical motive, in front as a focalizing and compacting shape.
One thing it is most important to notice; the exceedingly skilful
colour-scheme, conceived almost as a modern painter might conceive it, with a
limited scale, wonderful harmony of tones, and accented rather in the way that
he might accent it. The bodies of Odysseus and Diomedes are of a warm brown,
the shield—the device on which, Achilles’ training in manhood at the hands of
the noble centaur Chiron, sums up the underlying theme of the whole picture—a
brown warmer still, verging on red: Achilles’ body is much lighter, almost
pink, and gives back less metallic reflections, as through soft living and too
much shade: his head and shoulders are thrown up against the pale green of his
own dress and the light pinkish brown of Lycomedes’ cloak. Deidameia’s body
is framed in a mantle of palest lilac and white shadowed with green. This is
the whole range: white, olive green, pale green, pale lilac, pink, chestnut
red, and several shades down to a dark brown. How much of this harmony is due
to the original painter, how much to the Pompeian copyist ? We do not know.
In a villa at Boscoreale is a great
wall-painting, not a simple panel-picture, but a full decoration,
in a painted architectural setting which, with the conventional scarlet
background, serves to detach the figures from real life. Its meaning is not
clear, but some of the figures seem to be portraits of members of the Macedonian
court in the second half of the third century. The copyist, working perhaps not
much more than a hundred years after the original painter, has preserved much
of his spirit. There is no action, yet there is no lack of interest. The main
forms and the attitudes are broad and heroic, the details are throbbing with
life; over all there breathes a rarefied, almost an Olympian air. This is
Hellenistic painting at its best: complete master of its medium, yet entirely
without ostentation.
We pass on some years, but are perhaps
still in the third century with a great picture of the enslavement of Heracles
by Omphale, painted by an artist of Asia Minor, copied for a Pompeian house
some two or three hundred years later.
There is no background
here; figures fill, almost crowd, the field; less than a quarter above is
filled by a plain light greenish blue which finds echoes throughout the
draperies, and passes through yellow to brown and red. The centre is held by
the gigantic figure of Heracles, out-topping the rest by a head, his body
almost bare, a rich, light bronze, his head turned aside, vine-crowned, but in
anguish, with the shaded side thrown up against a bright cymbal, which tortures
the ear with its senseless din, like the shrill tuneless piping of the
insectile Eros on the other side. His arm rests round the shoulders of a sly,
sensual olding, Priapus; else he would reel: a swinish satyr brings up the rear
of this rout, which is only four strong with three Erotes, and yet so disposed
as to seem a noisy throng. Foil to this is the group on the right, again four;
three heads and one full-length figure arranged so as to recede into the depth
of the picture: the snake-like satisfaction of Omphale bedizened with the
lion’s spoils and holding the mighty club, a dark attendant whose gaze follows
hers staringly and emphasizes it, a girl looking up at Heracles, and another,
with sensitive mouth and eyes cast down, troubled, not liking to see so great a
man in such company, as when one blushes to see a good actor in a bad part.
We come now to the copy (from
Herculaneum) of a great picture of the Pergamene school, identified as such by
both subject and style; one would say of the second century and therefore nearly
contemporary with the Great Altar, but superior to it in feeling. On a rocky
ledge, and like carved rock herself, is seated a goddess, vast and grand, whose
eyes look into the distance. Mountainous, for the clear coldness of the drapery
is like a mountain-peak, though flower-crowned and fruitful, she sits there for
ever. She takes no part in .the action, but is herself the scene. If any help
in identifying her were needed, the satyr’s head and crook are the symbols of
Arcadia on its coins. Beneath her, and as it were to her side of the picture,
sits the infant Telephus, marvellously suckled by a hind, miraculously guarded
by an eagle. Heracles, his father, has been divinely led to the spot and dimly
feels the wonder and the portent. The theme is the glorification of the Attalid
house, and the story of Telephus occurs not only on the small frieze of the
Great Altar but on Pergamene coins. We shall not stop to analyse the
composition in detail: sufficient, to point out the two pairs of heads, the two
diagonals sloping away from the two lower corners into space in the upper: to
remark that Arcadia resembles some of the sculptural types of the mid-second
century and that Heracles is of the old Lysippic type: but whereas her body has
more grandeur than they and the head is free of the sensuousness we saw in
them, the head of Heracles is astonishingly debased, has feeble nose, coarse
unintelligent mouth, and is over-naturalistic throughout: conceive another
head on that body and the picture would gain infinitely in harmony.
We pass to a painting, that in the
Villa Item, different in many ways from the last. That was the
copy, probably fairly accurate, of a single self-contained picture: this has
been adapted to three walls of a room, and though its present composition
satisfies, we cannot tell that it has not been adjusted in the copying.
The figures there were realistically
conceived in space; these stand against a conventional scarlet background.
There the subject was clear and we were able to date it with an approach to
certainty: this has been variously explained and is difficult to date. Lately
its subject has been interpreted convincingly as the initiation of a bride.
Dionysus, in the lap of Ariadne, perfect type of wedded blessedness, is the
dominating figure at the performance of his ritual. The bride-to-be is seen to
pass through its successive stages—the reading of sacred formulae, a ritual
repast and ablution, divination by water of the marriage-fate, and the
unveiling of the liknon, basket-cradle of the god containing his sacred
emblems. The culminating rite is that of flagellation, fertility-inducing
magic: here Nike, goddess of success, plies the purging whip: and clashing
cymbals drown the cries of the victim, which, being of ill-omen, might break the
charm. Finally, the bride is seen decking herself for her wedding, and in the
last panel is left seated on the marriage-couch. In style the paintings show a
tendency to the academic, to lose touch with nature and to take refuge in a
simplicity which is false because it deliberately adopts formulae which should
have been outgrown. These are the characteristics which we find in some though
not all schools of sculpture in the second century, and it may be that we ought
to ascribe to that century the original from which these paintings are derived.
We come now to the work of Timomachus
of Byzantium, of the first half of the first century bc, who stands out as the last great Greek painter in the
true line of succession. Two of his pictures have probably come down to us in
copies: one the Medea which he did not live to finish, focussed as
one would expect on one personality, the mother, goaded by jealousy, meditating
the murder of her children. A type recalling earlier statues has been chosen
for this figure, but it is given a new meaning: the tenseness of feeling is
reflected in the upper drapery, twisted and tightly drawn, and in the
interlacing hands with thumbs pressed hard together, conflicting like the rage
and love in her agonized mind. All is at full strain but in equilibrium.
The other picture by Timomachus (if
indeed it be his, for the evidence shows probability but no certainty) is best
seen in a copy from Pompeii. It represents Pylades and Orestes,
bound, before King Thoas, and Iphigenia issuing from the temple: another tense
and pregnant moment, pregnant with a whole complex of action and emotion rather
than, as in the simple conflict of the last, with the sudden crumbling of
resistance followed by flashing murder. The connection between the two groups
is hinted appropriately by the ready altar. Above them—the apex of the triangle
of which they are the base-angles—isolated, stands Iphigenia, on whom the
interest of all is centred. The irony of the situation has a Greek relish. Noteworthy,
otherwise, the diagonal movement into space given by the placing of the steps,
and, once more, the grouped heads.
Also to the second century belonged
two pictures reproduced in the first century by a worker in mosaic, Dioscurides
of Samos, one of which we illustrat. It is a scene from comedy: the
participants sit on the podium of the stage and wear masks. Two ladies
have come to consult a wise woman: on the table before her lie a laurel branch,
an incense-burner and an incense- or charm-box: in her right hand she holds a
long-stemmed cup, and compresses the finger-tips of her left as she strains at
prophecy, and squints, we may imagine more than usually, with the effort. The
others hang on her pronouncement; one, in the centre, relieving her impatience
by chattering volubly, the other swelling with anxiety. We do not recognize the
scene, but the main idea is clear, and the humour and characterization
admirable. The masks accentuate the types and yet allow the artist to put into
them much individual feeling.
We reach last two branches
of painting, the development of which is characteristic of the Hellenistic age,
still-life and landscape. Still-life is the product of a painter’s mind, who
does not need to go to epic or myth for his subjects, but finds ready to his
hand in the commonest of things numberless problems of his art and an infinity
of beauty and interest. Closely connected with it, though inspired often rather
by the interest of the subject in its relation with life than primarily by
interest in the artistic problem, is the picture of manners; and even quite
early in the Hellenistic age there were painters (and writers as well) who
concentrated on something between the two—drinking-scenes, shops, the life of
peasants and their animals. Pictures of still-life and manners are made in a
time when the demand for purely religious dedications is flagging, and the
artist, no longer commissioned for a memorial of victory, or of divine help,
or of death, looks round him and chooses at will. His pictures will often,
though not always, be panel pictures, set up in houses as curiosities or
rarities, rather than as integral parts of the decoration. At the highest they
are of extraordinary skill, solid and full of light. We show one—peaches, a
peach-branch and a glass jar of water—which is of great beauty in design, in
rendering of form, and in colouring. Animals seem to have been a favourite
element in this kind of composition, and one of the most famous was the mosaic
of doves by Sosus, a Pergamene of the third century, which has reached us in
several versions. His ‘Unswept Floor,’ the offal of a banquet worked out, not
meanly, to the meanest detail, is partially preserved in a copy in the Lateran
Museum at Rome.
Landscape so far has always occurred,
when it occurred at all, which is rarely, as an adjunct necessary to the full
understanding of a picture, and inserted for that reason, typified usually by
the smallest extract possible. And even now pure landscape is not found: it is
still only the setting for life, whether human or mythical—the converse of
Turner’s method, where a mythological or biblical subject serves as a pretext
for some grand landscape painted for its own sake. There is a series of scenes
from the Odyssey, preserved in the Vatican, which will serve for an example.
The old scheme was, whenever possible, to show the figures only; the human, the
only important element. Here figures and setting are both shown, and the
balance between them is even. But there is no trace of landscape painting in
the modern sense. The painter needs woods and rocks and sea, because the story
mentions them. But he does not paint a study of wild rocky scenery or wooded
country or seascape. He understands abstract form, and puts down abstractions.
His wood is a grove, his sea clear moodless water, his rocks fantastic like
Patinir’s but without half their naturalistic detail. Everything is subservient
to his artistic purpose, and that is not objective but subjective, not only not
interpretational but not even imitative. Even in other landscapes where the
figures are definitely subordinate, this is always the aim, to depict man’s
world, not nature’s.
VII.
ARCHITECTURE AND TOWN-PLANNING
The achievements of Hellenistic
architecture, so far as they are known to us, may most conveniently be
summarized by treating of the several kinds of buildings, and indicating
briefly the trend of the development of each.
Of temples, the Didymaeum at Miletus,
a vast shell containing as its kernel the tiny Ionic shrine of the archaic image
carried off by Xerxes
and now restored by Seleucus, has already been described. Externally it was a
normal Ionic dipteros; but its great columns, five deep at the entrance, must
have seemed a forest. The temple of Zeus Olympios at Athens, continued in 174 bc by Antiochus Epiphanes (with
Cossutius as architect) on Peisistratid foundations, was dipteral, with three
rows of columns at front and back. The scale, the grouping, and the proportions
of the columns give to the sixteen which still survive from its hundred and
four a place among the most impressive remains of antiquity. About the
beginning of the second century the architect Hermogenes, in his temple of
Artemis Leucophryene at Magnesia on the Maeander, built an Ionic
pseudodipteros, by eliminating the inner row of columns in a dipteral plan; so
leaving an unusually wide space within the peristyle and effecting an immense
economy of material. Hermogenes has been credited with the
invention of this plan, but there are far earlier temples that approach very
close to it. Probably, then, being writer as well as architect, he systematized
it as an evolved form, distinct from the more or less accidental approximations
of earlier times. It is strange to reflect that the dipteros itself had
originally been introduced to enable the slender Ionic column to hold its own
against the sturdiness of the Doric.
Many temples were built during these
centuries—many large, and of small more than before, these last for the growing
number of small religious groups. There are numerous variations on orthodox
plans which had now reached the limit of normal evolution: and these
variations, based on arbitrary taste, and, rarely, on the study of foreign
models, seem to be designed either to avoid the commonplace or to meet the requirements
of some abnormality in the cult: some, especially those devoted to the
celebration of mysteries, deviate widely from tradition. In temple-architecture
generally, the Doric order is supplanted by the Ionic (later, too, by the
Corinthian), and even where admitted is Ionicized. The stereotyped form of both
Ionic and Corinthian capitals is now reached, and though a good deal of variety
is found, none of the modifications which either underwent remained popular,
save the convenient four-sided Ionic, which seems to have led to the Composite
in the first century ad. There are
some curious experiments, as in the Didymaeum, where a bust, sculptured in the
manner of the Pergamene Great Altar (though held by some to be of Roman date),
projects from each volute of an Ionic capital; and inventions based on eastern
models, such as the bull-capitals of Delos, in a late fourth-century building
apparently designed to accommodate a votive ship. But the unpleasing Ionic
capital reconstructed by Puchstein, and widely accepted as embodying the
formula of Vitruvius, results from a misunderstanding: Vitruvius was describing
the capital of the living Hellenistic tradition of his day, familiar to us from
surviving examples .
There is now a fondness for leaving
the lower part of columns, both Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian, unfluted, a
proceeding natural enough when the flutes would have been in a position to be
chipped by crowds, by porters’ baskets, or by the hazards of domestic life.
Columns entirely unfluted were also used, but not, as later, for a new
aesthetic purpose.
In buildings other than temples, new
forms were demanded by new purposes. The ship of Hiero II, a kind of houseboat,
with exceedingly rich decoration and a luxuriant garden; the still more
elaborate floating palace of Ptolemy IV; the lighthouse built by Sostratus for
Ptolemy on the island of Pharos at Alexandria, a three-storey building nearly
four hundred feet high with a beacon on the third storey, which earned its
designer wide fame and served as a model for many others; the time-and-weather-indicator (‘Tower of the Winds’) of Andronicus Cyrrhestes at Athens,
about 50 bc.—these are but
examples of the varied tasks on which architects were now employed. Some
palaces were built, but most, if we judge from the description of Vitruvius and
the scanty remains, were enlarged Greek houses rather than palaces in the
Oriental sense.
Traditional plans underwent
improvement and modification, generally in the sense of greater specialization.
Gymnasia were more formal, and the parts more clearly differentiated, the
gymnasium proper being separated from the enclosed palaestra where wrestling
and boxing took place, and the bath again from these: some of their
developments may have contributed, through the hypertrophy of that part devoted
to the baths, to the plan of the Roman thermae. Theatres now began to approach
the modern plan, by the truncation of the circular orchestra, and the aggrandizement
of the raised stage.
The form usually associated with the
ancient theatre—and its acoustic properties—also commended itself to architects
as suitable for debating halls. It contrasts not unfavourably with the
commonest modern type (not unknown in antiquity) where a speaker faces only
half his audience, and members have to turn their heads to see the president.
At Priene, the ecclesiasterion resembles a quadrate theatre, and is thus
in essentials like a petrification of the Thersilion. At Miletus, the bouleuterion erected by Antiochus Epiphanes in the second quarter of the second century b.c. is simply a theatre roofed in and
adapted to a rectangular plan. The use of an ordinary gable roof, which, even
with the help of four internal columns, could only span the building by having
its ridge run down the long axis at right angles to the axis of the theatre,
was a timid expedient which brought difficulties into the design of the
elevation, and led the architect into an unhappy reminiscence of a
pseudo-dipteral temple on a podium, with engaged columns, and four somewhat
insignificant entrances on the short axis.
The agora, the focus of daily life,
was normally surrounded on three sides, internally by colonnades, externally by
a wall. Its smells and cries were thus cut off from the rest of the city, yet
it was centrally placed and easily accessible. Here was freedom from draughts,
and from the accompaniment of draughts, dusteddies. Here, under the columns,
sheltered sunny places, and shady places. Everywhere, save for the obstruction
offered by haphazard dedications, ample space for circulation. So little
changed are the circumstances of this primary human activity, that even in our
own more rigorous climate the designer of a modern market might do worse than
adopt such a general scheme.
The colonnade remained one of the
chief elements of design. Medieval philosophy was to find shelter in the
cloister: its southern prototype cradled one of the great philosophical systems
of antiquity. The colonnaded street, a protection against sun and rain, common
in Roman times, was perhaps first introduced at Antioch in the first century bc; while it was Sostratus, the maker of
the lighthouse on Pharos, who built at Cnidus, in the third, a series of
superimposed colonnades with ambulatories in the upper storeys.
The mention of the agora calls to mind
the science and the art of town-planning, which may be said to have been now
first systematically studied; for although streets had been laid out at right
angles to each other by Hippodamus of Miletus in the fifth century bc (an arrangement preserved by the
modern streets in the Piraeus) the practice had not become usual. The
circumstances were indeed such as to stimulate the growth of this study, for
with the opening up of new and vast territories, especially in the East,
hundreds of new towns were being built, often on virgin sites. It is difficult
to make statements which will hold good of even a majority of these, for we
have examples of several —no doubt there were many others—where abnormal
natural conditions or older buildings created special problems demanding
special solutions just as they do today. Rhodes and Halicarnassus, for
example, using natural contours, gave expression to the importance of their
maritime life by laying out their streets as if they were the seat-rows and
gangways of a great theatre, the orchestra of which was the harbour basin. But
so far as one can generalize from the few towns fully excavated (and even these
have accretions of later date), the usual plan was to build an encircling wall
of fortifications, now highly efficient, along the contours which best suited
it; and within this area, which naturally was often irregular, to lay out the
town with streets regularly spaced cutting each other at right angles. The
blocks thus formed would ordinarily be occupied by houses of one storey, though
on cramped sites the buildings might run up to several; private gardens were
rare. Towards the centre of the city would be the agora, with a main street
sometimes bounding one side.
Priene is often taken as an example of
Hellenistic townplanning, because its evidence is clear and full, but we
cannot be certain that it was typical (in some ways we know that it was not),
and, having been laid out as early as the end of the fourth century, it will
represent a comparatively rudimentary stage. Many cities may have been more
formal—indeed Strabo implies that a common plan was to divide the city into
four quarters by two main streets connecting the four main gates—many cities
were certainly less formal in plan: and the expedients for solving local
problems were numerous.
Priene stands on the lower southern
slope of a hill which as it rises becomes too precipitous for ordinary
habitation.
This precipitous side and the summit
were therefore enclosed within the fortifications, but not used for building.
The occupied slope was divided by fifteen streets running north and south,
intersected at right angles by six, of which the largest, that leading to the
West Gate, ran through the agora near its north side. The slope of the hill
relieved any monotony which might arise from the regular rectangular crossings,
for the streets running north and south sloped, and were stepped at intervals.
The agora itself and the civic buildings were not far from the centre of the
city, and actually adjoined one of the temples, that of Asclepius, though this
faced away from the agora. The chief temple, of Athena Polias, which lay near,
was not disregarded by the plan, but yet was not intimately correlated with the
other main buildings.
Theatres usually took advantage of
natural slopes, and that at Priene was no exception, being built against the
steepening slope on the north of the city, while on the south, where the ground
was more nearly level, were placed the gymnasia and stadium. Another
arrangement, and a more spectacular use of the natural features of a site, was
at Pergamum, where all the sacred buildings, including the Great Altar, were
grouped, together with the agora, to crown the skyline of the Acropolis, the
theatre stretched below them down the slope, and beneath it was cut a
magnificent terrace to serve as basis for the whole design. The
planning of the less important parts of Pergamum seems however to have been
somewhat neglected. And indeed we find, in general, that architects had a
quicker eye for natural features and the use which might be made of them, than
for the possibilities of artificial grouping and approach. Thus the absence of
squares and gardens usually prevented impressive views of buildings or groups
of buildings, though many temples had forecourts and even propylaea. Too rigid
an adherence to the chessboard plan brought with it the usual defects. The
parallel rather than the axis dominated. It is rare to find a street centred on
the axis of a building: instead, it runs past, parallel to the facade, or down
one side, not leading up to it. You turned aside to go in. St Peter’s in a
side-street. At Priene the widest street touches twenty-four feet: the main
streets of Pergamum were fixed by law at not less than thirty. In Hellenistic
cities generally they were not paved, for Smyrna boasted that she was the first
to pave them. One of the greatest problems of today, that of traffic, hardly
existed. Sewers were now sometimes closed; and the importance of pure and
abundant water-supply (brought in under pressure where necessary, otherwise by
gravitation) was realized, though public fountains were not in general
superseded by supplies to private houses. A fragmentary inscription at
Pergamum describes arrangements made for scavenging, for dealing with dangerous
structures, for the repair of roads, and for the prevention of damp in houses
set one below the other on a slope.
For domestic architecture, the main
sources of information are Priene again, and Delos, which happen to be the
cities most fully known and published. Vitruvius also gives an account of the
Greek house; but this is somewhat difficult to reconcile in all points with the
actual remains. The excavations have made one point clear, namely that the
Mycenaean plan persisted into Hellenistic times, and therefore must have been
used (though sparingly, for the house of the ordinary citizen was always boxlike)
in the previous centuries for which we have not so much information. At Priene
the normal plan of the third and second centuries is for the houses to be
entered by a narrow covered passage varying in length, leading to an open
rectangular courtyard, on the north of which (facing south) is a portico with
two columns in antis, opening on to the main room. This is the survival
of the Mycenaean megaron, which in essentials survives also in any
ordinary Doric temple of the fifth century. It is a plan designed to give the
maximum of sun in winter and of shade in summer, for the portico admitted the
winter sun, but was shaded in the hottest months, because the sun is then
higher in the sky; while shelter from excessive heat or cold could always be
had in the main room. Sometimes both porch and main room connected with other
rooms beside them, and one or more of the remaining sides of the courtyard were
taken up by storerooms, bedrooms or the like. All rooms were normally lighted
from the courtyard. The house ordinarily presented a blank wall to the street,
with an unpretentious entrance door, often set back to form a small porch. At
Delos, in those houses (of the second century) which have been excavated, the megaron plan cannot be distinguished, but most have one room opening on to the pillared
court. Some of these Delian houses were lighted by windows on the street, and
there are evidences of an upper storey (presumably of bedrooms, the natural
corollary of external lighting) although the wooden staircases have
disappeared. The description by Vitruvius (substantiated in some measure by a
house at Priene) refers to luxurious houses having a normal Greek plan, though much
elaborated: and this is the form that royal residences would generally take. It
mentions two or more courts, the first being the old nucleus of main room
facing south, used normally by the mistress of the house, and bedrooms; with
the dining-room and rooms for slaves round the other sides of the courts. The
second, reserved for the use of the men, has colonnades on all sides, that
facing south sometimes being more lofty (a fashion called Rhodian) with large
banqueting and gaming rooms behind: such Colonnades have been found at Pompeii
and Palmyra, and, facing east instead of south, at Delos. The side facing north
contained a picture-gallery (or a special dining-room called Cyzicene, perhaps
for hot weather); that facing east a library, that west exedrae—open-air
resting-places; while separate rows of guestrooms were annexed on two sides,
presumably east and west. At Pompeii the houses are of the Italic plan, which
bears only a superficial resemblance to the Greek. It is sometimes used by
itself, sometimes in combination with the Greek peristyle. This combination
appears as a building with two courts, the first the Roman atrium, with tablinum and alae, the second, the Greek, now beside, now behind it, serving as a
kind of pleasure-court or interiors were decorated by marble panelling, or by
painted imitations of it, by stucco painted and gilded, by inlay of rich woods,
and by paintings. These were sometimes architectural perspectives (of which
the most famous and fantastic was in the ecclesiasterion of Tralles): or
they consisted of simple architectural ornament, sometimes with small devices
added, sometimes forming the frame for more ambitious wall-pictures. Ceilings
were coloured and inlaid, floors variegated with marbles or mosaics. But the
internal decoration of the dwelling-house is best studied in Graeco-Roman
buildings on Italian soil: otherwise we depend on casual references by ancient
writers.
For exteriors, polygonal masonry never
went quite out of fashion. The effect of rectangular masonry was enhanced by
drafting the edges and bossing the surface of the blocks, as well as by varying
the height of the courses. The arch, rarely found in temples, less rarely in
tombs, continued to be used with fine effect in large wall-surfaces, especially
for the gates of city or fortification walls.
If it were possible to sum up in a few
words the achievements of architects during so long a period and over so wide and
diverse an area, it might be said that they were content, when building a
traditional building, with a traditional plan, modifying, elaborating,
sometimes improving it; but that they tended to be timid in departing from a
comparatively narrow.orbit of plans, methods and materials: nor had economic
pressure yet forced them to demand of those materials the maximum load or the
maximum strain. On the other hand, examples are not wanting of those who, when
faced with exceptional tasks, were bold enough to ignore traditional forms, and
instead of attempting to adapt to a new purpose the plan or elevation of
another kind of building, allowed function to dominate, and so produced designs
which may fairly be called original.
ROME AND THE MEDITERRANEAN. 218-133 BC
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