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Artistic canons of body proportions

An artistic canon of body proportions (or aesthetic canon of proportion), in the sphere of visual arts, is a formally codified set of criteria deemed mandatory for a particular artistic style of figurative art. The word canon (from Ancient Greek κανών (kanṓn) 'measuring rod, standard') was first used for this type of rule in Classical Greece, where it set a reference standard for body proportions, so as to produce a harmoniously formed figure appropriate to depict gods or kings. Other art styles have similar rules that apply particularly to the representation of royal or divine personalities.

The traditional Egyptian depiction of the body in flat images. The figure represents the Roman Emperor Trajan (ruled 98–117 CE) making offerings to Egyptian Gods, Dendera Temple complex, Egypt.[1]

Ancient Egypt Edit

In 1961, Danish Egyptologist Erik Iverson described a canon of proportions in classical Egyptian painting.[2][verification needed][3] This work was based on still-detectable grid lines on tomb paintings: he determined that the grid was 18 cells high, with the base-line at the soles of the feet and the top of the grid aligned with hair line,[4] and the navel at the eleventh line.[5] These 'cells' were specified according to the size of the subject's fist, measured across the knuckles.[6] (Iverson attempted to find a fixed (rather than relative) size for the grid, but this aspect of his work has been dismissed by later analysts.[7][8]) This proportion was already established by the Narmer Palette from about the 31st century BCE, and remained in use until at least the conquest by Alexander the Great some 3,000 years later.[6]

The Egyptian canon for paintings and reliefs specified that heads should be shown in profile, that shoulders and chest be shown head-on, that hips and legs be again in profile, and that male figures should have one foot forward and female figures stand with feet together.[9]

Classical Greece Edit

 
Doryphoros (Roman copy)

Canon of Polykleitos Edit

In Classical Greece, the sculptor Polykleitos (fifth century BCE) established the Canon of Polykleitos. Though his theoretical treatise is lost to history,[10] he is quoted as saying, "Perfection ... comes about little by little (para mikron) through many numbers".[11] By this he meant that a statue should be composed of clearly definable parts, all related to one another through a system of ideal mathematical proportions and balance. Though the Kanon was probably represented by his Doryphoros, the original bronze statue has not survived, but later marble copies exist.

Despite the many advances made by modern scholars towards a clearer comprehension of the theoretical basis of the Canon of Polykleitos, the results of these studies show an absence of any general agreement upon the practical application of that canon in works of art. An observation on the subject by Rhys Carpenter remains valid:[12] "Yet it must rank as one of the curiosities of our archaeological scholarship that no-one has thus far succeeded in extracting the recipe of the written canon from its visible embodiment, and compiling the commensurable numbers that we know it incorporates."[a]

— Richard Tobin, The Canon of Polykleitos, 1975.[13]

Canon of Lysippos Edit

The sculptor Lysippos (fourth century BCE) developed a more gracile style.[14] In his Historia Naturalis, Pliny the Elder wrote that Lysippos introduced a new canon into art: capita minora faciendo quam antiqui, corpora graciliora siccioraque, per qum proceritassignorum major videretur,[15][b] signifying "a canon of bodily proportions essentially different from that of Polykleitos".[17] Lysippos is credited with having established the 'eight heads high' canon of proportion.[18]

Praxiteles Edit

Praxiteles (fourth century BCE), sculptor of the famed Aphrodite of Knidos, is credited with having thus created a canonical form for the female nude,[19] but neither the original work nor any of its ratios survive. Academic study of later Roman copies (and in particular modern restorations of them) suggest that they are artistically and anatomically inferior to the original.[20]

Classical India Edit

 
Shiva as Nataraja (the Lord of Dance)

Various canons are set out in the Shilpa Shastras.

There are different sets of proportions given in the Hindu Āgamas for the making of images. Each of these varies with the subject; for example, images of the three Supreme deities, Bramā, Vishnu and Śiva are required to be formed according to the set of proportions collectively called the uttama-daśa-tāla measurement; similarly, the malhyama-daśa-tāla is prescribed for images of the principal Śaktis (goddesses), Lakshmi, Bhūmi, Durgā, Pārvati and Sarasvati: the pancha-tāla, for making the figure of Gaṇapati, and the chatus-tāla for the figures of children and of deformed and dwarfed men. The term tāla literally means the palm of the hand, and by implication is a measure of length equal to that between the tip of the middle finger and the end of the palm near the wrist. This length is in all instances taken to be equal to the length of the face from the scalp to the chin. It is therefore usual to measure the total length in terms of the length of the face rather than in terms of the palm of the hand. This practice is followed also in the succeeding paragraphs. The reader would be inclined to believe that the phrases daśa-tāla, paṅcha-tāla and ēkatāl mean lengths equal to ten, five and one tāla respectively, but unfortunately this interpretation does not seem to agree with the actual measurements; for example, the total length of an image made according to the Uttama-daśa-ālc measurement is 124 aṅgulas, and the tāla of this image measures 13 aṅgulas; dividing the total length by the length of the tāla we find that there are only 9 tāla in it; again, the total length of a chatus-tāla image is 48 aṅgulas and its tāla is 8 aṅgulas and therefore there are 6 tālas in this set of proportions. Thus it is found that there is no etymological significance clearly visible in the names given to the various proportions.[21]

The artist does not choose his own problems: he finds in the canon instruction to make such and such images in such and such [a] fashion - for example, an image of Nataraja with four arms, of Brahma with four heads, of Mahisha-Mardini with ten arms, or Ganesa with an elephant’s head.[22]

It is in drawing from the life that a canon is likely to be a hindrance to the artist; but it is not the method of Indian art to work from the model. Almost the whole philosophy of Indian art is summed up in the verse of Śukrācārya's Śukranĩtisāra which enjoins meditations upon the imager: "In order that the form of an image may be brought fully and clearly before the mind, the imager should medi[t]ate; and his success will be proportionate to his meditation. No other way—not indeed seeing the object itself—will achieve his purpose." The canon then, is of use as a rule of thumb, relieving him of some part of the technical difficulties, leaving him free to concentrate his thought more singly on the message or burden of his work. It is only in this way that it must have been used in periods of great achievement, or by great artists.[23]

— Ananda K. Coomaraswamy

Renaissance Italy Edit

 
Vitruvian Man by Leonardo da Vinci

Other such systems of 'ideal proportions' in painting and sculpture include Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, based on a record of body proportions made by the architect Vitruvius,[24] in the third book of his series De architectura. Rather than setting a canon of ideal body proportions for others to follow, Vitruvius sought to identify the proportions that exist in reality; da Vinci idealised these proportions in the commentary that accompanies his drawing:

The length of the outspread arms is equal to the height of a man; from the hairline to the bottom of the chin is one-tenth of the height of a man; from below the chin to the top of the head is one-eighth of the height of a man; from above the chest to the top of the head is one-sixth of the height of a man; from above the chest to the hairline is one-seventh of the height of a man. The maximum width of the shoulders is a quarter of the height of a man; from the breasts to the top of the head is a quarter of the height of a man; the distance from the elbow to the tip of the hand is a quarter of the height of a man; the distance from the elbow to the armpit is one-eighth of the height of a man; the length of the hand is one-tenth of the height of a man; the root of the penis is at half the height of a man; the foot is one-seventh of the height of a man; from below the foot to below the knee is a quarter of the height of a man; from below the knee to the root of the penis is a quarter of the height of a man; the distances from below the chin to the nose and the eyebrows and the hairline are equal to the ears and to one-third of the face.[25][c]

Japan Edit

Canon of Jōchō Edit

Jōchō (定朝; died 1057 CE), also known as Jōchō Busshi, was a Japanese sculptor of the Heian period. He popularised the yosegi technique of sculpting a single figure out of many pieces of wood, and he redefined the canon of body proportions used in Japan to create Buddhist imagery.[26] He based the measurements on a unit equal to the distance between the sculpted figure's chin and hairline.[27] The distance between each knee (in the seated lotus pose) is equal to the distance from the bottoms of the legs to the hair.[27]

Other measurements Edit

 
Andrew Loomis's method, from Figure Drawing for All It's Worth

Contemporary (head-based) method Edit

Modern figurative artists tend to use a shorthand of more comprehensive canons, based on proportions relative to the human head. In the system recommended by Andrew Loomis, an idealized human body is eight heads tall, the torso being three heads and the legs another four; a more realistically proportioned body, he claims, is closer to seven-and-a-half heads tall, the difference being in the length of the legs. He additionally recommends head-based proportions for children of varying ages, and as means of producing different effects in adult bodies (e.g. a "heroic" body is nine heads tall).[28]

See also Edit

  • Academic art – Style of painting and sculpture
  • Anthropic units – Academic term in archaeology, social studies and measurement
  • Beauty – Characteristic that provides pleasure or satisfaction
  • Canon (basic principle), a rule or a body of rules or principles generally established as valid and fundamental in a field of art or philosophy
  • Chibi (style) – Style of caricature originating in Japan
  • Figurative art – Art that depicts real object sources
  • Nudity – Scientific and cultural information about human nudity
    • Depictions of nudity – Visual representations of the nude human form
    • Nude (art) – Work of art that has as its primary subject the unclothed human body
  • Neoclassicism – Western cultural movement inspired by ancient Greece and Rome
  • Physical attractiveness – Aesthetic assessment of physical traits

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Tobin's conjectured reconstruction is described at Polykleitos#Conjectured reconstruction.
  2. ^ 'he made the heads of his statues smaller than the ancients, and defined the hair especially, making the bodies more slender and sinewy by which the height of the figure seemed greater'[16]
  3. ^ Translation by Wikipedia editor, copied from Vetruvian Man

References Edit

  1. ^ Stadter, Philip A.; Van der Stockt, L. (2002). Sage and Emperor: Plutarch, Greek Intellectuals, and Roman Power in the Time of Trajan (98-117 A.D.). Leuven University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-90-5867-239-1. Trajan was, in fact, quite active in Egypt. Separate scenes of Domitian and Trajan making offerings to the gods appear on reliefs on the propylon of the Temple of Hathor at Dendera. There are cartouches of Domitian and Trajan on the column shafts of the Temple of Knum at Esna, and on the exterior a frieze text mentions Domitian, Trajan, and Hadrian
  2. ^ Iverson, Erik (1961). The myth of Egypt and its hieroglyphs in European tradition. Copenhagen: G. E. C. Gad Publishers. (Reprinted 1993 by Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691021249 OCLC 60113765)
  3. ^ Iverson, Erik; Shibata, Yoshiaki (1975). Canon and proportions in Egyptian art (2nd ed.). Warminster: Aris and Phillips. ISBN 9780856680472. OCLC 2913392.
  4. ^ "Canon of Proportions". Pyramidofman.com.
  5. ^ "The Pyramid and the body". Pyramidofman.com.
  6. ^ a b Smith, W. Stevenson; Simpson, William Kelly (1998). The Art and Architecture of Ancient Egypt. Penguin/Yale History of Art (3rd ed.). Yale University Press. pp. 12–13, note 17. ISBN 0300077475.
  7. ^ Gay Robins (2010). Proportion and Style in Ancient Egyptian Art. University of Texas Press. ISBN 9780292787742.
  8. ^ John A.R. Legon. "The Cubit and the Egyptian Canon of Art". legon.demon.co.uk.
  9. ^ Hartwig, Melinda K. (2015). A companion to Ancient Egyptian Art. Wiley. p. 123. ISBN 9781444333503.
  10. ^ "Art: Doryphoros (Canon)". Art Through Time: A Global View. Annenberg Learner. Retrieved 15 September 2020. we are told quite unequivocally that he related every part to every other part and to the whole and used a mathematical formula in order to do so. What that formula was is a matter of conjecture.
  11. ^ Philo, Mechanicus (4.1, 49.20), quoted in Andrew Stewart (1990). "Polykleitos of Argos". One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. New Haven: Yale University Press..
  12. ^ Rhys Carpenter (1960). Greek Sculpture : a critical review. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 100. cited in Tobin (1975)
  13. ^ Tobin, Richard (1975). "The Canon of Polykleitos". American Journal of Archaeology. 79 (4): 307–321. doi:10.2307/503064. JSTOR 503064. S2CID 191362470. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  14. ^ Charles Waldstein, PhD. (December 17, 1879). Praxiteles and the Hermes with the Dionysos-child from the Heraion in Olympia (PDF). p. 18. The canon of Polykleitos was heavy and square, his statues were quadrata signa, the canon of Lysippos was more slim, less fleshy
  15. ^ Pliny the Elder. "XXXIV 65". Historia Naturalis. cited in Waldstein (1879)
  16. ^ George Redford, FRCS. "Lysippos and Macedonian Art". A manual of ancient sculpture: Egyptian–Assyrian–Greek–Roman (PDF). p. 193.
  17. ^ Walter Woodburn Hyde (1921). Olympic Victor Monuments and Greek Athletic Art. Washington: the Carnegie Institution of Washington. p. 136.
  18. ^ "Hercules: The influence of works by Lysippos". Paris: The Louvre. Retrieved 4 October 2020. In the fourth century BCE, Lysippos drew up a canon of proportions for a more elongated figure that that defined by Polykleitos in the previous century. According to Lysippos, the height of the head should be one-eighth the height of the body, and not one-seventh, as Polykleitos recommended.
  19. ^ Bahrani, Zainab (1996). "The Hellenization of Ishtar: Nudity, Fetishism, and the Production of Cultural Differentiation in Ancient Art". Oxford Art Journal. 19 (2): 4. doi:10.1093/oxartj/19.2.3. JSTOR 1360725. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
  20. ^ Ad. Michaelis (1887). "The Cnidian Aphrodite of Praxiteles". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 8: 324–355. doi:10.2307/623481. hdl:2027/uiuo.ark:/13960/t4nk9qk9q. JSTOR 623481. S2CID 162412362. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  21. ^ Gopinatha Rao, T. A. (1920). "Talamana or Iconometry". Memoirs Of The Archaeological Survey Of India. Vol. 3. Calcutta: Superintendent Government Printing. p. 35.
  22. ^ Coomaraswamy, Ananda K. (1911). "Indian Images with Many Arms". The Dance of Shiva – fourteen Indian essays.
  23. ^ Coomaraswamy, Ananda K. (1934). "Aesthetic of The Śukranĩtisāra". The Transformation of Nature in Art. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 111–117. cited in Mosteller, John F (1988). "The Study of Indian Iconometry in Historical Perspective". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 108 (1): 99–110. doi:10.2307/603249. JSTOR 603249. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  24. ^ Vitruvius. "I, "On Symmetry: In Temples And In The Human Body"". Ten Books on Architecture, Book III. Translated by Morris Hicky Morgan. Harvard University Press. Retrieved 15 October 2020 – via Gutenberg.org.
  25. ^ Leonardo da Vinci. "Human proportions". The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci. Translated by Edward MacCurdy. Raynal and Hitchcock Inc. p. 213–214 – via Archive.org.
  26. ^ Miyeko Murase (1975). Japanese art : selections from the Mary and Jackson Burke Collection. New York, N.Y.: Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 22. ISBN 9780870991363.
  27. ^ a b Mason, Penelope; Dinwiddie, Donald (2005). History of Japanese Art (2nd. ed.). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 144. ISBN 9780131176010.
  28. ^ Loomis, Andrew (1943). Figure Drawing for All It's Worth. World Publishing Company. pp. 28–29.

artistic, canons, body, proportions, artistic, canon, redirects, here, more, general, concept, canon, literature, canon, basic, principle, artistic, canon, body, proportions, aesthetic, canon, proportion, sphere, visual, arts, formally, codified, criteria, dee. Artistic canon redirects here For the more general concept of a canon in art and literature see Canon basic principle An artistic canon of body proportions or aesthetic canon of proportion in the sphere of visual arts is a formally codified set of criteria deemed mandatory for a particular artistic style of figurative art The word canon from Ancient Greek kanwn kanṓn measuring rod standard was first used for this type of rule in Classical Greece where it set a reference standard for body proportions so as to produce a harmoniously formed figure appropriate to depict gods or kings Other art styles have similar rules that apply particularly to the representation of royal or divine personalities The traditional Egyptian depiction of the body in flat images The figure represents the Roman Emperor Trajan ruled 98 117 CE making offerings to Egyptian Gods Dendera Temple complex Egypt 1 Contents 1 Ancient Egypt 2 Classical Greece 2 1 Canon of Polykleitos 2 2 Canon of Lysippos 2 3 Praxiteles 3 Classical India 4 Renaissance Italy 5 Japan 5 1 Canon of Jōchō 6 Other measurements 6 1 Contemporary head based method 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesAncient Egypt EditFor broader coverage of this topic see Art of ancient Egypt In 1961 Danish Egyptologist Erik Iverson described a canon of proportions in classical Egyptian painting 2 verification needed 3 This work was based on still detectable grid lines on tomb paintings he determined that the grid was 18 cells high with the base line at the soles of the feet and the top of the grid aligned with hair line 4 and the navel at the eleventh line 5 These cells were specified according to the size of the subject s fist measured across the knuckles 6 Iverson attempted to find a fixed rather than relative size for the grid but this aspect of his work has been dismissed by later analysts 7 8 This proportion was already established by the Narmer Palette from about the 31st century BCE and remained in use until at least the conquest by Alexander the Great some 3 000 years later 6 The Egyptian canon for paintings and reliefs specified that heads should be shown in profile that shoulders and chest be shown head on that hips and legs be again in profile and that male figures should have one foot forward and female figures stand with feet together 9 Classical Greece Edit Doryphoros Roman copy For broader coverage of this topic see Ancient Greek art Classical Canon of Polykleitos Edit In Classical Greece the sculptor Polykleitos fifth century BCE established the Canon of Polykleitos Though his theoretical treatise is lost to history 10 he is quoted as saying Perfection comes about little by little para mikron through many numbers 11 By this he meant that a statue should be composed of clearly definable parts all related to one another through a system of ideal mathematical proportions and balance Though the Kanon was probably represented by his Doryphoros the original bronze statue has not survived but later marble copies exist Despite the many advances made by modern scholars towards a clearer comprehension of the theoretical basis of the Canon of Polykleitos the results of these studies show an absence of any general agreement upon the practical application of that canon in works of art An observation on the subject by Rhys Carpenter remains valid 12 Yet it must rank as one of the curiosities of our archaeological scholarship that no one has thus far succeeded in extracting the recipe of the written canon from its visible embodiment and compiling the commensurable numbers that we know it incorporates a Richard Tobin The Canon of Polykleitos 1975 13 Canon of Lysippos Edit The sculptor Lysippos fourth century BCE developed a more gracile style 14 In his Historia Naturalis Pliny the Elder wrote that Lysippos introduced a new canon into art capita minora faciendo quam antiqui corpora graciliora siccioraque per qum proceritassignorum major videretur 15 b signifying a canon of bodily proportions essentially different from that of Polykleitos 17 Lysippos is credited with having established the eight heads high canon of proportion 18 Praxiteles Edit Praxiteles fourth century BCE sculptor of the famed Aphrodite of Knidos is credited with having thus created a canonical form for the female nude 19 but neither the original work nor any of its ratios survive Academic study of later Roman copies and in particular modern restorations of them suggest that they are artistically and anatomically inferior to the original 20 Classical India Edit Shiva as Nataraja the Lord of Dance Various canons are set out in the Shilpa Shastras There are different sets of proportions given in the Hindu Agamas for the making of images Each of these varies with the subject for example images of the three Supreme deities Brama Vishnu and Siva are required to be formed according to the set of proportions collectively called the uttama dasa tala measurement similarly the malhyama dasa tala is prescribed for images of the principal Saktis goddesses Lakshmi Bhumi Durga Parvati and Sarasvati the pancha tala for making the figure of Gaṇapati and the chatus tala for the figures of children and of deformed and dwarfed men The term tala literally means the palm of the hand and by implication is a measure of length equal to that between the tip of the middle finger and the end of the palm near the wrist This length is in all instances taken to be equal to the length of the face from the scalp to the chin It is therefore usual to measure the total length in terms of the length of the face rather than in terms of the palm of the hand This practice is followed also in the succeeding paragraphs The reader would be inclined to believe that the phrases dasa tala paṅcha tala and ekatal mean lengths equal to ten five and one tala respectively but unfortunately this interpretation does not seem to agree with the actual measurements for example the total length of an image made according to the Uttama dasa alc measurement is 124 aṅgulas and the tala of this image measures 13 aṅgulas dividing the total length by the length of the tala we find that there are only 9 tala in it again the total length of a chatus tala image is 48 aṅgulas and its tala is 8 aṅgulas and therefore there are 6 talas in this set of proportions Thus it is found that there is no etymological significance clearly visible in the names given to the various proportions 21 T A Gopinatha Rao The artist does not choose his own problems he finds in the canon instruction to make such and such images in such and such a fashion for example an image of Nataraja with four arms of Brahma with four heads of Mahisha Mardini with ten arms or Ganesa with an elephant s head 22 Ananda K Coomaraswamy It is in drawing from the life that a canon is likely to be a hindrance to the artist but it is not the method of Indian art to work from the model Almost the whole philosophy of Indian art is summed up in the verse of Sukracarya s Sukranĩtisara which enjoins meditations upon the imager In order that the form of an image may be brought fully and clearly before the mind the imager should medi t ate and his success will be proportionate to his meditation No other way not indeed seeing the object itself will achieve his purpose The canon then is of use as a rule of thumb relieving him of some part of the technical difficulties leaving him free to concentrate his thought more singly on the message or burden of his work It is only in this way that it must have been used in periods of great achievement or by great artists 23 Ananda K CoomaraswamyRenaissance Italy Edit Vitruvian Man by Leonardo da VinciOther such systems of ideal proportions in painting and sculpture include Leonardo da Vinci s Vitruvian Man based on a record of body proportions made by the architect Vitruvius 24 in the third book of his series De architectura Rather than setting a canon of ideal body proportions for others to follow Vitruvius sought to identify the proportions that exist in reality da Vinci idealised these proportions in the commentary that accompanies his drawing The length of the outspread arms is equal to the height of a man from the hairline to the bottom of the chin is one tenth of the height of a man from below the chin to the top of the head is one eighth of the height of a man from above the chest to the top of the head is one sixth of the height of a man from above the chest to the hairline is one seventh of the height of a man The maximum width of the shoulders is a quarter of the height of a man from the breasts to the top of the head is a quarter of the height of a man the distance from the elbow to the tip of the hand is a quarter of the height of a man the distance from the elbow to the armpit is one eighth of the height of a man the length of the hand is one tenth of the height of a man the root of the penis is at half the height of a man the foot is one seventh of the height of a man from below the foot to below the knee is a quarter of the height of a man from below the knee to the root of the penis is a quarter of the height of a man the distances from below the chin to the nose and the eyebrows and the hairline are equal to the ears and to one third of the face 25 c Japan EditCanon of Jōchō Edit Jōchō 定朝 died 1057 CE also known as Jōchō Busshi was a Japanese sculptor of the Heian period He popularised the yosegi technique of sculpting a single figure out of many pieces of wood and he redefined the canon of body proportions used in Japan to create Buddhist imagery 26 He based the measurements on a unit equal to the distance between the sculpted figure s chin and hairline 27 The distance between each knee in the seated lotus pose is equal to the distance from the bottoms of the legs to the hair 27 Other measurements Edit Andrew Loomis s method from Figure Drawing for All It s WorthContemporary head based method Edit Modern figurative artists tend to use a shorthand of more comprehensive canons based on proportions relative to the human head In the system recommended by Andrew Loomis an idealized human body is eight heads tall the torso being three heads and the legs another four a more realistically proportioned body he claims is closer to seven and a half heads tall the difference being in the length of the legs He additionally recommends head based proportions for children of varying ages and as means of producing different effects in adult bodies e g a heroic body is nine heads tall 28 See also EditAcademic art Style of painting and sculpture Anthropic units Academic term in archaeology social studies and measurement Beauty Characteristic that provides pleasure or satisfaction Canon basic principle a rule or a body of rules or principles generally established as valid and fundamental in a field of art or philosophy Western canon Cultural classics valued in the West Chibi style Style of caricature originating in Japan Figurative art Art that depicts real object sources Nudity Scientific and cultural information about human nudity Depictions of nudity Visual representations of the nude human form Nude art Work of art that has as its primary subject the unclothed human body Neoclassicism Western cultural movement inspired by ancient Greece and Rome Physical attractiveness Aesthetic assessment of physical traitsNotes Edit Tobin s conjectured reconstruction is described at Polykleitos Conjectured reconstruction he made the heads of his statues smaller than the ancients and defined the hair especially making the bodies more slender and sinewy by which the height of the figure seemed greater 16 Translation by Wikipedia editor copied from Vetruvian ManReferences Edit Stadter Philip A Van der Stockt L 2002 Sage and Emperor Plutarch Greek Intellectuals and Roman Power in the Time of Trajan 98 117 A D Leuven University Press p 75 ISBN 978 90 5867 239 1 Trajan was in fact quite active in Egypt Separate scenes of Domitian and Trajan making offerings to the gods appear on reliefs on the propylon of the Temple of Hathor at Dendera There are cartouches of Domitian and Trajan on the column shafts of the Temple of Knum at Esna and on the exterior a frieze text mentions Domitian Trajan and Hadrian Iverson Erik 1961 The myth of Egypt and its hieroglyphs in European tradition Copenhagen G E C Gad Publishers Reprinted 1993 by Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691021249 OCLC 60113765 Iverson Erik Shibata Yoshiaki 1975 Canon and proportions in Egyptian art 2nd ed Warminster Aris and Phillips ISBN 9780856680472 OCLC 2913392 Canon of Proportions Pyramidofman com The Pyramid and the body Pyramidofman com a b Smith W Stevenson Simpson William Kelly 1998 The Art and Architecture of Ancient Egypt Penguin Yale History of Art 3rd ed Yale University Press pp 12 13 note 17 ISBN 0300077475 Gay Robins 2010 Proportion and Style in Ancient Egyptian Art University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292787742 John A R Legon The Cubit and the Egyptian Canon of Art legon demon co uk Hartwig Melinda K 2015 A companion to Ancient Egyptian Art Wiley p 123 ISBN 9781444333503 Art Doryphoros Canon Art Through Time A Global View Annenberg Learner Retrieved 15 September 2020 we are told quite unequivocally that he related every part to every other part and to the whole and used a mathematical formula in order to do so What that formula was is a matter of conjecture Philo Mechanicus 4 1 49 20 quoted in Andrew Stewart 1990 Polykleitos of Argos One Hundred Greek Sculptors Their Careers and Extant Works New Haven Yale University Press Rhys Carpenter 1960 Greek Sculpture a critical review Chicago University of Chicago Press p 100 cited in Tobin 1975 Tobin Richard 1975 The Canon of Polykleitos American Journal of Archaeology 79 4 307 321 doi 10 2307 503064 JSTOR 503064 S2CID 191362470 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Charles Waldstein PhD December 17 1879 Praxiteles and the Hermes with the Dionysos child from the Heraion in Olympia PDF p 18 The canon of Polykleitos was heavy and square his statues were quadrata signa the canon of Lysippos was more slim less fleshy Pliny the Elder XXXIV 65 Historia Naturalis cited in Waldstein 1879 George Redford FRCS Lysippos and Macedonian Art A manual of ancient sculpture Egyptian Assyrian Greek Roman PDF p 193 Walter Woodburn Hyde 1921 Olympic Victor Monuments and Greek Athletic Art Washington the Carnegie Institution of Washington p 136 Hercules The influence of works by Lysippos Paris The Louvre Retrieved 4 October 2020 In the fourth century BCE Lysippos drew up a canon of proportions for a more elongated figure that that defined by Polykleitos in the previous century According to Lysippos the height of the head should be one eighth the height of the body and not one seventh as Polykleitos recommended Bahrani Zainab 1996 The Hellenization of Ishtar Nudity Fetishism and the Production of Cultural Differentiation in Ancient Art Oxford Art Journal 19 2 4 doi 10 1093 oxartj 19 2 3 JSTOR 1360725 Retrieved 4 April 2021 Ad Michaelis 1887 The Cnidian Aphrodite of Praxiteles The Journal of Hellenic Studies 8 324 355 doi 10 2307 623481 hdl 2027 uiuo ark 13960 t4nk9qk9q JSTOR 623481 S2CID 162412362 Retrieved 5 April 2021 Gopinatha Rao T A 1920 Talamana or Iconometry Memoirs Of The Archaeological Survey Of India Vol 3 Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing p 35 Coomaraswamy Ananda K 1911 Indian Images with Many Arms The Dance of Shiva fourteen Indian essays Coomaraswamy Ananda K 1934 Aesthetic of The Sukranĩtisara The Transformation of Nature in Art Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press pp 111 117 cited in Mosteller John F 1988 The Study of Indian Iconometry in Historical Perspective Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 1 99 110 doi 10 2307 603249 JSTOR 603249 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Vitruvius I On Symmetry In Temples And In The Human Body Ten Books on Architecture Book III Translated by Morris Hicky Morgan Harvard University Press Retrieved 15 October 2020 via Gutenberg org Leonardo da Vinci Human proportions The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci Translated by Edward MacCurdy Raynal and Hitchcock Inc p 213 214 via Archive org Miyeko Murase 1975 Japanese art selections from the Mary and Jackson Burke Collection New York N Y Metropolitan Museum of Art p 22 ISBN 9780870991363 a b Mason Penelope Dinwiddie Donald 2005 History of Japanese Art 2nd ed Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall p 144 ISBN 9780131176010 Loomis Andrew 1943 Figure Drawing for All It s Worth World Publishing Company pp 28 29 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Artistic canons of body proportions amp oldid 1168047465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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