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Polykleitos

Polykleitos (Ancient Greek: Πολύκλειτος) was an ancient Greek sculptor, active in the 5th century BCE. Alongside the Athenian sculptors Pheidias, Myron and Praxiteles, he is considered as one of the most important sculptors of classical antiquity.[1] The 4th century BCE catalogue attributed to Xenocrates (the "Xenocratic catalogue"), which was Pliny's guide in matters of art, ranked him between Pheidias and Myron.[2] He is particularly known for his lost treatise, the Canon of Polykleitos (a canon of body proportions), which set out his mathematical basis of an idealised male body shape.

Polykleitos's Doryphoros, an early example of classical contrapposto. Roman marble copy in the National Archaeological Museum, Naples

None of his original sculptures are known to survive, but many marble works, mostly Roman, are believed to be later copies.

Name edit

 
A Polykleitan Diadumenos, in a Roman marble copy, National Archaeological Museum of Athens

His Greek name was traditionally Latinized Polycletus, but is also transliterated Polycleitus (Ancient Greek: Πολύκλειτος, Classical Greek Greek pronunciation: [polýkleːtos], "much-renowned") and, due to iotacism in the transition from Ancient to Modern Greek, Polyklitos or Polyclitus. He is called Sicyonius (lit. "The Sicyonian", usually translated as "of Sicyon")[3] by Latin authors including Pliny the Elder and Cicero, and Ἀργεῖος (lit. "The Argive", trans. "of Argos") by others like Plato and Pausanias. He is sometimes called the Elder, in cases where it is necessary to distinguish him from his son, who is regarded as a major architect but a minor sculptor.

Early life and training edit

As noted above, Polykleitos is called "The Sicyonian" by some authors, all writing in Latin, and who modern scholars view as relying on an error of Pliny the Elder in conflating another more minor sculptor from Sikyon, a disciple of Phidias, with Polykleitos of Argos. Pausanias is adamant that they were not the same person, and that Polykleitos was from Argos, in which city state he must have received his early training,[a] and a contemporary of Phidias (possibly also taught by Ageladas).

Works edit

 
The Townley Marbles Discophoros, British Museum

Polykleitos's figure of an Amazon for Ephesus was admired, while his colossal gold and ivory statue of Hera which stood in her temple—the Heraion of Argos—was favourably compared with the Olympian Zeus by Pheidias. He also sculpted a famous bronze male nude known as the Doryphoros ("Spear Bearer"), which survives in the form of numerous Roman marble copies. Further sculptures attributed to Polykleitos are the Discophoros ("Discus-bearer"), Diadumenos ("Youth tying a headband")[4] and a Hermes at one time placed, according to Pliny, in Lysimachia (Thrace). Polykleitos's Astragalizontes ("Boys Playing at Knuckle-bones") was claimed by the Emperor Titus and set in a place of honour in his atrium.[5] Pliny also mentions that Polykleitos was one of the five major sculptors who competed in the fifth century B.C. to make a wounded Amazon for the temple of Artemis; marble copies associated with the competition survive.[6]

Diadumenos edit

The statue of Diadumenos, also known as Youth Tying a Headband is one of Polykleitos's sculptures known from many copies. The gesture of the boy tying his headband represents a victory, possibly from an athletic contest. "It is a first-century A.D. Roman copy of a Greek bronze original dated around 430 B.C."[4] Polykleitos sculpted the outline of his muscles significantly to show that he is an athlete. "The thorax and pelvis of the Diadoumenos tilt in opposite directions, setting up rhythmic contrasts in the torso that create an impression of organic vitality. The position of the feet poised between standing and walking give a sense of potential movement. This rigorously calculated pose, which is found in almost all works attributed to Polykleitos, became a standard formula used in Greco-Roman and, later, western European art."[4]

Doryphoros edit

Another statue created by Polykleitos is the Doryphoros, also called the Spear bearer. It is a typical Greek sculpture depicting the beauty of the male body. "Polykleitos sought to capture the ideal proportions of the human figure in his statues and developed a set of aesthetic principles governing these proportions that was known as the Canon or 'Rule'.[7] He created the system based on mathematical ratios. "Though we do not know the exact details of Polykleitos’s formula, the end result, as manifested in the Doryphoros, was the perfect expression of what the Greeks called symmetria.[7] On this sculpture, it shows somewhat of a contrapposto pose; the body is leaning most on the right leg. The Doryphoros has an idealized body, contains less of naturalism. In his left hand, there was once a spear, but if so it has since been lost. The posture of the body shows that he is a warrior and a hero.[4][7] Indeed, some have gone so far as to suggest that the figure depicted was Achilles, on his way to the Trojan War, as a similar depiction of Achilles carrying a shield is seen on a vase painted by the Achilles Painter at around the same time.[8]

Style edit

 
Apollo of the "Mantua type", marble Roman copy after a 5th-century-BC Greek original attributed to Polykleitos, Musée du Louvre

Polykleitos, along with Phidias, created the Classical Greek style. Although none of his original works survive, literary sources identifying Roman marble copies of his work allow reconstructions to be made. Contrapposto, a pose that visualizes the shifting balance of the body as weight is placed on one leg, was a source of his fame.

The refined detail of Polykleitos's models for casting executed in clay is revealed in a famous remark repeated in Plutarch's Moralia, that "the work is hardest when the clay is under the fingernail".[9]

The Canon of Polykleitos and "symmetria" edit

Polykleitos consciously created a new approach to sculpture, writing a treatise (an artistic canon (from Ancient Greek Κανών (Kanṓn) 'measuring rod, standard') and designing a male nude exemplifying his theory of the mathematical basis of ideal proportions. 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 his Canon was probably represented by his Doryphoros, the original bronze statue has not survived, but later marble copies exist.

References to the Kanon by other ancient writers imply that its main principle was expressed by the Greek words symmetria, the Hippocratic principle of isonomia ("equilibrium"), and rhythmos. Galen wrote that Polykleitos's Kanon "got its name because it had a precise commensurability (symmetria) of all the parts to one another."[12] He also wrote that the Kanon defines beauty "in the proportions, not of the elements, but of the parts, that is to say, of finger to finger, and of all the fingers to the palm and the wrist, and of these to the forearm, and of the forearm to the upper arm, and of all the other parts to each other."[13]

The art historian Kenneth Clark observed that "[Polykleitos's] general aim was clarity, balance, and completeness; his sole medium of communication the naked body of an athlete, standing poised between movement and repose".[14]

Conjectured reconstruction edit

 
Illustration of the phalanges of a human hand

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:[15] "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."

— Richard Tobin, The Canon of Polykleitos, 1975.[16]

In a 1975 paper, art historian Richard Tobin[b] suggested that earlier work to reconstruct the Canon had failed because previous researchers had made a flawed assumption of a foundation in linear ratios rather than areal proportion.[16] He conjectured that the Canon begins from the length of the outermost part (the "distal phalange") of the little finger. The length of the diagonal of a square of this side (mathematically, 2, about 1.4142) gives the length of the middle phalange. Repeating the process gives the length of the proximal phalange; doing so again gives the length of the metacarpal plus the carpal bones – the distance from knuckle to the head of the ulna. Next, a square of side equal to the length of the hand from little finger to wrist yields a diagonal of length equal to that of the forearm. This "diagonal of a square" process gives the relative ratios of many other key reference distances in the human male body.[18] The process would not require measurement of square roots: the artist could take a long cord and make knots separated from each other by a distance which equals the diagonal of the square drawn on the preceding length.[19] On the body proper, the process is repeated but the geometric progression is taken and retaken from the top of the head (rather than additively, as on the hand/arm): the head from crown to chin is the same size as the fore-arm; from crown to clavicle is as long as the upper arm; a diagonal on that square yields the distance from the crown to the line of the nipples.[20] Tobin validated his calculation by comparing his theoretical model with a Roman copy of Doryphoros in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples.[21]

Followers edit

Polykleitos and Phidias were among the first generation of Greek sculptors to attract schools of followers. Polykleitos's school lasted for at least three generations, but it seems to have been most active in the late 4th century and early 3rd century BCE. The Roman writers Pliny and Pausanias noted the names of about twenty sculptors in Polykleitos's school, defined by their adherence to his principles of balance and definition. Skopas and Lysippus are among the best-known successors of Polykleitos.

Polykleitos's son, Polykleitos the Younger, worked in the 4th century BCE. Although the son was also a sculptor of athletes, his greatest fame was won as an architect. He designed the great theatre at Epidaurus.

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ That a "school of Argos" existed during the fifth century is minimized as "marginal" by Jeffery M. Hurwit, "The Doryphoros: Looking Backward", in Warren G. Moon, ed. Polykleitos, the Doryphoros, and Tradition, 1995:3-18.
  2. ^ Richard Tobin holds a doctorate in Art History from Bryn Mawr College. Since April 2016, he is director of Harwood Museum of Art at the University of New Mexico.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Blumberg, Naomi. "Polyclitus". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  2. ^ Andrew Stewart (1990). "Polykleitos of Argos". One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  3. ^ Pliny the Elder Natural Histories 34.19.23
  4. ^ a b c d "Statue of Diadoumenos (youth tying a fillet around his head)". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  5. ^ Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia
  6. ^ "Statue of a wounded Amazon". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  7. ^ a b c "Art: Doryphoros (Canon)". Art Through Time: A Global View. Annenberg Learner. Retrieved September 27, 2015.
  8. ^ "Greek vases 800-300 BC: key pieces". www.beazley.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  9. ^ Plutarch, Quaest. conv. II 3, 2, 636B-C, quoted in Stewart.
  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, quoted in Stewart.
  12. ^ Galen, De Temperamentis.
  13. ^ De la Croix, Horst; Tansey, Richard G.; Kirkpatrick, Diane (1991). Gardner's Art Through the Ages (9th ed.). Thomson/Wadsworth. p. 163. ISBN 0-15-503769-2.
  14. ^ Clark 1956:63.
  15. ^ Rhys Carpenter (1960). Greek Sculpture : a critical review. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 100. cited in Tobin (1975), p. 307
  16. ^ a b Tobin (1975), p. 307.
  17. ^ "Tobin appointed director of UNM's Harwood Museum of Art" (Press release). 22 April 2016. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  18. ^ Tobin (1975), p. 309.
  19. ^ Tobin (1975), p. 310.
  20. ^ Tobin (1975), p. 313.
  21. ^ Tobin (1975), p. 315.

Sources edit

  • Pausanias (1911) [143-176]. Description of Greece. Translated by W H S Jones. London: Heinman.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Polyclitus". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 22–23.
  • Tobin, Richard (1975). "The Canon of Polykleitos". American Journal of Archaeology. 79 (4): 307–321. doi:10.2307/503064. JSTOR 503064. S2CID 191362470.

External links edit

  Media related to Polykleitos at Wikimedia Commons

polykleitos, other, people, named, polyclitus, polyclitus, disambiguation, ancient, greek, Πολύκλειτος, ancient, greek, sculptor, active, century, alongside, athenian, sculptors, pheidias, myron, praxiteles, considered, most, important, sculptors, classical, a. For other people named Polyclitus see Polyclitus disambiguation Polykleitos Ancient Greek Polykleitos was an ancient Greek sculptor active in the 5th century BCE Alongside the Athenian sculptors Pheidias Myron and Praxiteles he is considered as one of the most important sculptors of classical antiquity 1 The 4th century BCE catalogue attributed to Xenocrates the Xenocratic catalogue which was Pliny s guide in matters of art ranked him between Pheidias and Myron 2 He is particularly known for his lost treatise the Canon of Polykleitos a canon of body proportions which set out his mathematical basis of an idealised male body shape Polykleitos s Doryphoros an early example of classical contrapposto Roman marble copy in the National Archaeological Museum Naples None of his original sculptures are known to survive but many marble works mostly Roman are believed to be later copies Contents 1 Name 2 Early life and training 3 Works 3 1 Diadumenos 3 2 Doryphoros 4 Style 5 The Canon of Polykleitos and symmetria 5 1 Conjectured reconstruction 6 Followers 7 Gallery 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksName edit nbsp A Polykleitan Diadumenos in a Roman marble copy National Archaeological Museum of Athens His Greek name was traditionally Latinized Polycletus but is also transliterated Polycleitus Ancient Greek Polykleitos Classical Greek Greek pronunciation polykleːtos much renowned and due to iotacism in the transition from Ancient to Modern Greek Polyklitos or Polyclitus He is called Sicyonius lit The Sicyonian usually translated as of Sicyon 3 by Latin authors including Pliny the Elder and Cicero and Ἀrgeῖos lit The Argive trans of Argos by others like Plato and Pausanias He is sometimes called the Elder in cases where it is necessary to distinguish him from his son who is regarded as a major architect but a minor sculptor Early life and training editAs noted above Polykleitos is called The Sicyonian by some authors all writing in Latin and who modern scholars view as relying on an error of Pliny the Elder in conflating another more minor sculptor from Sikyon a disciple of Phidias with Polykleitos of Argos Pausanias is adamant that they were not the same person and that Polykleitos was from Argos in which city state he must have received his early training a and a contemporary of Phidias possibly also taught by Ageladas Works edit nbsp The Townley Marbles Discophoros British Museum Polykleitos s figure of an Amazon for Ephesus was admired while his colossal gold and ivory statue of Hera which stood in her temple the Heraion of Argos was favourably compared with the Olympian Zeus by Pheidias He also sculpted a famous bronze male nude known as the Doryphoros Spear Bearer which survives in the form of numerous Roman marble copies Further sculptures attributed to Polykleitos are the Discophoros Discus bearer Diadumenos Youth tying a headband 4 and a Hermes at one time placed according to Pliny in Lysimachia Thrace Polykleitos s Astragalizontes Boys Playing at Knuckle bones was claimed by the Emperor Titus and set in a place of honour in his atrium 5 Pliny also mentions that Polykleitos was one of the five major sculptors who competed in the fifth century B C to make a wounded Amazon for the temple of Artemis marble copies associated with the competition survive 6 Diadumenos edit The statue of Diadumenos also known as Youth Tying a Headband is one of Polykleitos s sculptures known from many copies The gesture of the boy tying his headband represents a victory possibly from an athletic contest It is a first century A D Roman copy of a Greek bronze original dated around 430 B C 4 Polykleitos sculpted the outline of his muscles significantly to show that he is an athlete The thorax and pelvis of the Diadoumenos tilt in opposite directions setting up rhythmic contrasts in the torso that create an impression of organic vitality The position of the feet poised between standing and walking give a sense of potential movement This rigorously calculated pose which is found in almost all works attributed to Polykleitos became a standard formula used in Greco Roman and later western European art 4 Doryphoros edit Another statue created by Polykleitos is the Doryphoros also called the Spear bearer It is a typical Greek sculpture depicting the beauty of the male body Polykleitos sought to capture the ideal proportions of the human figure in his statues and developed a set of aesthetic principles governing these proportions that was known as the Canon or Rule 7 He created the system based on mathematical ratios Though we do not know the exact details of Polykleitos s formula the end result as manifested in the Doryphoros was the perfect expression of what the Greeks called symmetria 7 On this sculpture it shows somewhat of a contrapposto pose the body is leaning most on the right leg The Doryphoros has an idealized body contains less of naturalism In his left hand there was once a spear but if so it has since been lost The posture of the body shows that he is a warrior and a hero 4 7 Indeed some have gone so far as to suggest that the figure depicted was Achilles on his way to the Trojan War as a similar depiction of Achilles carrying a shield is seen on a vase painted by the Achilles Painter at around the same time 8 Style edit nbsp Apollo of the Mantua type marble Roman copy after a 5th century BC Greek original attributed to Polykleitos Musee du Louvre Polykleitos along with Phidias created the Classical Greek style Although none of his original works survive literary sources identifying Roman marble copies of his work allow reconstructions to be made Contrapposto a pose that visualizes the shifting balance of the body as weight is placed on one leg was a source of his fame The refined detail of Polykleitos s models for casting executed in clay is revealed in a famous remark repeated in Plutarch s Moralia that the work is hardest when the clay is under the fingernail 9 The Canon of Polykleitos and symmetria editFurther information Mathematics and art Polykleitos consciously created a new approach to sculpture writing a treatise an artistic canon from Ancient Greek Kanwn Kanṓn measuring rod standard and designing a male nude exemplifying his theory of the mathematical basis of ideal proportions 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 his Canon was probably represented by his Doryphoros the original bronze statue has not survived but later marble copies exist References to the Kanon by other ancient writers imply that its main principle was expressed by the Greek words symmetria the Hippocratic principle of isonomia equilibrium and rhythmos Galen wrote that Polykleitos s Kanon got its name because it had a precise commensurability symmetria of all the parts to one another 12 He also wrote that the Kanon defines beauty in the proportions not of the elements but of the parts that is to say of finger to finger and of all the fingers to the palm and the wrist and of these to the forearm and of the forearm to the upper arm and of all the other parts to each other 13 The art historian Kenneth Clark observed that Polykleitos s general aim was clarity balance and completeness his sole medium of communication the naked body of an athlete standing poised between movement and repose 14 Conjectured reconstruction edit nbsp Illustration of the phalanges of a human hand 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 15 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 Richard Tobin The Canon of Polykleitos 1975 16 In a 1975 paper art historian Richard Tobin b suggested that earlier work to reconstruct the Canon had failed because previous researchers had made a flawed assumption of a foundation in linear ratios rather than areal proportion 16 He conjectured that the Canon begins from the length of the outermost part the distal phalange of the little finger The length of the diagonal of a square of this side mathematically 2 about 1 4142 gives the length of the middle phalange Repeating the process gives the length of the proximal phalange doing so again gives the length of the metacarpal plus the carpal bones the distance from knuckle to the head of the ulna Next a square of side equal to the length of the hand from little finger to wrist yields a diagonal of length equal to that of the forearm This diagonal of a square process gives the relative ratios of many other key reference distances in the human male body 18 The process would not require measurement of square roots the artist could take a long cord and make knots separated from each other by a distance which equals the diagonal of the square drawn on the preceding length 19 On the body proper the process is repeated but the geometric progression is taken and retaken from the top of the head rather than additively as on the hand arm the head from crown to chin is the same size as the fore arm from crown to clavicle is as long as the upper arm a diagonal on that square yields the distance from the crown to the line of the nipples 20 Tobin validated his calculation by comparing his theoretical model with a Roman copy of Doryphoros in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples 21 Followers editPolykleitos and Phidias were among the first generation of Greek sculptors to attract schools of followers Polykleitos s school lasted for at least three generations but it seems to have been most active in the late 4th century and early 3rd century BCE The Roman writers Pliny and Pausanias noted the names of about twenty sculptors in Polykleitos s school defined by their adherence to his principles of balance and definition Skopas and Lysippus are among the best known successors of Polykleitos Polykleitos s son Polykleitos the Younger worked in the 4th century BCE Although the son was also a sculptor of athletes his greatest fame was won as an architect He designed the great theatre at Epidaurus Gallery editRoman copies or interpretations of lost original works attributed to Polykleitos nbsp Doryphoros Minneapolis Institute of Art nbsp Bronze statue of an athlete from Ephesus cleaning his strigil 1st century CE copy of a possible original by Polykleitos nbsp Pan with flute Roman copy of a possible original by PolykleitosNotes edit That a school of Argos existed during the fifth century is minimized as marginal by Jeffery M Hurwit The Doryphoros Looking Backward in Warren G Moon ed Polykleitos the Doryphoros and Tradition 1995 3 18 Richard Tobin holds a doctorate in Art History from Bryn Mawr College Since April 2016 he is director of Harwood Museum of Art at the University of New Mexico 17 References edit Blumberg Naomi Polyclitus Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 25 June 2023 Andrew Stewart 1990 Polykleitos of Argos One Hundred Greek Sculptors Their Careers and Extant Works New Haven Yale University Press Pliny the Elder Natural Histories 34 19 23 a b c d Statue of Diadoumenos youth tying a fillet around his head Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 24 June 2015 Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia Statue of a wounded Amazon Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 24 June 2015 a b c Art Doryphoros Canon Art Through Time A Global View Annenberg Learner Retrieved September 27 2015 Greek vases 800 300 BC key pieces www beazley ox ac uk Retrieved 2021 05 20 Plutarch Quaest conv II 3 2 636B C quoted in Stewart 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 quoted in Stewart Galen De Temperamentis De la Croix Horst Tansey Richard G Kirkpatrick Diane 1991 Gardner s Art Through the Ages 9th ed Thomson Wadsworth p 163 ISBN 0 15 503769 2 Clark 1956 63 Rhys Carpenter 1960 Greek Sculpture a critical review Chicago University of Chicago Press p 100 cited in Tobin 1975 p 307 a b Tobin 1975 p 307 Tobin appointed director of UNM s Harwood Museum of Art Press release 22 April 2016 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Tobin 1975 p 309 Tobin 1975 p 310 Tobin 1975 p 313 Tobin 1975 p 315 Sources editPausanias 1911 143 176 Description of Greece Translated by W H S Jones London Heinman nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Polyclitus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 22 23 Tobin Richard 1975 The Canon of Polykleitos American Journal of Archaeology 79 4 307 321 doi 10 2307 503064 JSTOR 503064 S2CID 191362470 External links edit nbsp Media related to Polykleitos at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polykleitos amp oldid 1214611206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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