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Statue

A statue is a free-standing sculpture in which the realistic, full-length figures of persons or animals are carved or cast in a durable material such as wood, metal or stone. Typical statues are life-sized or close to life-size; a sculpture that represents persons or animals in full figure but that is small enough to lift and carry is a statuette or figurine, whilst one more than twice life-size is a colossal statue.[1]

Statue of Unity (2018), world's tallest statue, Gujarat, India
Hermes and the Infant Dionysus by Praxiteles, 4th century BC, Archaeological Museum of Olympia, Greece

Statues have been produced in many cultures from prehistory to the present; the oldest-known statue dating to about 30,000 years ago. Statues represent many different people and animals, real and mythical. Many statues are placed in public places as public art. The world's tallest statue, Statue of Unity, is 182 metres (597 ft) tall and is located near the Narmada dam in Gujarat, India.

Colors edit

Ancient statues often show the bare surface of the material of which they are made. For example, many people associate Greek classical art with white marble sculpture, but there is evidence that many statues were painted in bright colors.[2] Most of the color has weathered off over time; small remnants were removed during cleaning; in some cases small traces remained that could be identified.[2] A travelling exhibition of 20 coloured replicas of Greek and Roman works, alongside 35 original statues and reliefs, was held in Europe and the United States in 2008: Gods in Color: Painted Sculpture of Classical Antiquity.[3]

Details such as whether the paint was applied in one or two coats, how finely the pigments were ground or exactly which binding medium would have been used in each case—all elements that would affect the appearance of a finished piece—are not known.[2] Richter goes so far as to say of classical Greek sculpture, "All stone sculpture, whether limestone or marble, was painted, either wholly or in part."[4]

Medieval statues were also usually painted, with some still retaining their original pigments. The coloring of statues ceased during the Renaissance, since excavated classical sculptures, which had lost their coloring, became regarded as the best models.

Historical periods edit

Prehistoric edit

 
Urfa Man, in the Şanlıurfa Museum; sandstone, 1.80 metres (5 ft 11 in) c. 9,000 BC

The Venus of Berekhat Ram, an anthropomorphic pebble found in northern Israel and dated to at least 230,000 years before present, is claimed to be the oldest known statuette. However, researchers are divided as to whether its shape is derived from natural erosion or was carved by an early human.[5] The Venus of Tan-Tan, a similar object of similar age found in Morocco, has also been claimed to be a statuette.[6]

The Löwenmensch figurine and the Venus of Hohle Fels, both from Germany, are the oldest confirmed statuettes in the world, dating to 35,000-40,000 years ago.[7][8][9]

The oldest known life-sized statue is Urfa Man found in Turkey which is dated to around 9,000 BC.

Antiquity edit

Religion edit

Throughout history, statues have been associated with cult images in many religious traditions, from Ancient Egypt, Ancient India, Ancient Greece, and Ancient Rome to the present. Egyptian statues showing kings as sphinxes have existed since the Old Kingdom, the oldest being for Djedefre (c. 2500 BC).[10] The oldest statue of a striding pharaoh dates from the reign of Senwosret I (c. 1950 BC) and is the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.[11] The Middle Kingdom of Egypt (starting around 2000 BC) witnessed the growth of block statues which then became the most popular form until the Ptolemaic period (c. 300 BC).[12]

The focal point of the cella or main interior space of a Roman or Greek temple was a statue of the deity it was dedicated to. In major temples these could be several times life-size. Other statues of deities might have subordinate positions along the side walls.

The oldest statue of a deity in Rome was the bronze statue of Ceres in 485 BC.[13][14] The oldest statue in Rome is now the statue of Diana on the Aventine.[15]

Politics edit

For a successful Greek or Roman politician or businessman (who donated considerable sums to public projects for the honour), having a public statue, preferably in the local forum or the grounds of a temple was an important confirmation of status, and these sites filled up with statues on plinths (mostly smaller than those of their 19th century equivalents). Fragments in Rome of a bronze colossus of Constantine and the marble colossus of Constantine show the enormous scale of some imperial statues; other examples are recorded, notably one of Nero.

The wonders of the world include several statues from antiquity, with the Colossus of Rhodes and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia among the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

Middle Ages edit

While sculpture generally flourished in European Medieval art, the single statue was not one of the most common types, except for figures of the Virgin Mary, usually with Child, and the corpus or body of Christ on crucifixes. Both of these appeared in all size up to life-size, and by the late Middle Ages many churches, even in villages, had a crucifixion group around a rood cross. The Gero Cross in Cologne is both one of the earliest and finest large figures of the crucified Christ. As yet, full-size standing statues of saints and rulers were uncommon, but tomb effigies, generally lying down, were very common for the wealthy from about the 14th century, having spread downwards from royal tombs in the centuries before.

While Byzantine art flourished in various forms, sculpture and statue making witnessed a general decline; although statues of emperors continued to appear.[16] An example was the statue of Justinian (6th century) which stood in the square across from the Hagia Sophia until the fall of Constantinople in the 15th century.[16] Part of the decline in statue making in the Byzantine period can be attributed to the mistrust the Church placed in the art form, given that it viewed sculpture in general as a method for making and worshiping idols.[16] While making statues was not subject to a general ban, it was hardly encouraged in this period.[16] Justinian was one of the last Emperors to have a full-size statue made, and secular statues of any size became virtually non-existent after iconoclasm; and the artistic skill for making statues was lost in the process.

Renaissance edit

 
Michelangelo's David, 1504, The Accademia Gallery, Florence, Italy

Italian Renaissance sculpture rightly regarded the standing statue as the key form of Roman art, and there was a great revival of statues of both religious and secular figures, to which most of the leading figures contributed, led by Donatello and Michelangelo. The equestrian statue, a great technical challenge, was mastered again, and gradually statue groups.

These trends intensified in Baroque art, when every ruler wanted to have statues made of themself, and Catholic churches filled with crowds of statues of saints, although after the Protestant Reformation religious sculpture largely disappeared from Protestant churches, with some exceptions in large Lutheran German churches. In England, churches instead were filled with increasing elaborate tomb monuments, for which the ultimate models were continental extravagances such as the Papal tombs in Rome, those of the Doges of Venice, or the French royal family.

In the late 18th and 19th century there was a growth in public open air statues of public figures on plinths. As well as monarches, politicians, generals, landowners, and eventually artists and writers were commemorated. World War I saw the war memorial, previously uncommon, become very widespread, and these were often statues of generic soldiers.

Modern Era edit

Starting with the work of Maillol around 1900, the human figures embodied in statues began to move away from the various schools of realism that had been followed for thousands of years. The Futurist and Cubist schools took this metamorphism even further until statues, often still nominally representing humans, had lost all but the most rudimentary relationship to the human form. By the 1920s and 1930s statues began to appear that were completely abstract in design and execution.[17]

The notion that the position of the hooves of horses in equestrian statues indicated the rider's cause of death has been disproved.[18][19]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Collins online dictionary: Colossal "2. (in figure sculpture) approximately twice life-size."; entry in the Getty Art & Architecture Thesaurus® Online
  2. ^ a b c "Archaeological Institute of America: Carved in Living Color". Archaeology.org. 23 June 2008. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  3. ^ . 4 January 2009. Archived from the original on 4 January 2009. Retrieved 30 December 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ Richter, Gisela M. A., The Handbook of Greek Art: Architecture, Sculpture, Gems, Coins, Jewellery, Metalwork, Pottery and Vase Painting, Glass, Furniture, Textiles, Paintings and Mosaics, Phaidon Publishers Inc., New York, 1960 p. 46
  5. ^ Venus of Berekhat Ram (230-700,000 BCE) cork.com
  6. ^ Rincon, Paul (23 May 2003). "'Oldest sculpture' found in Morocco". BBC News. Retrieved 15 May 2009.
  7. ^ "Lion man takes pride of place as oldest statue" by Rex Dalton, Nature 425, 7 (4 September 2003) doi:10.1038/425007a also Nature News 4 September 2003
  8. ^ "Ice Age Lion Man is world's earliest figurative sculpture" by Martin Bailey, The Art Newspaper 31 January 2013
  9. ^ Universität Tübingen. July 22, 2016. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  10. ^ The Egyptian Museum in Cairo by Abeer El-Shahawy and Farid Atiya (10 November 2005) ISBN 9771721836 page 117
  11. ^ The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt by Donald B. Redford (15 December 2000) ISBN 0195102347 page 230
  12. ^ Egyptian Statues by Gay Robins (4 March 2008) ISBN 0747805202 page 28
  13. ^ Famous Firsts in the Ancient Greek and Roman World by David Matz (Jun 2000) ISBN 0786405996 page 87
  14. ^ The Art of Rome c.753 B.C.-A.D. 337 by Jerome Jordan Pollitt (30 June 1983) ISBN 052127365X page 19
  15. ^ Samnium and the Samnites by E. T. Salmon (2 September 1967) ISBN 0521061857 page 181
  16. ^ a b c d Byzantine Art by Charles Bayet (1 October 2009) ISBN 1844846202 page 54
  17. ^ Giedion-Welcker, Carola, ‘’Contemporary Sculpture: An Evolution in Volume and Space, A revised and Enlarged Edition’’, Faber and Faber, London, 1961 pp. X to XX
  18. ^ Barbara Mikkelson (2 August 2007). "Statue of Limitations". Snopes.com. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
  19. ^ Cecil Adams (6 October 1989). "In statues, does the number of feet the horse has off the ground indicate the fate of the rider?". The Straight Dope. Chicago Reader. Retrieved 9 June 2011.

External links edit

    statue, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, statute, statue, free, standing, sculpture, which, realistic, full, length, figures, persons, animals, carved, cast, durable, material, such, wood, metal, stone, typical, statues, life, sized, close, life, s. For other uses see Statue disambiguation Not to be confused with statute A statue is a free standing sculpture in which the realistic full length figures of persons or animals are carved or cast in a durable material such as wood metal or stone Typical statues are life sized or close to life size a sculpture that represents persons or animals in full figure but that is small enough to lift and carry is a statuette or figurine whilst one more than twice life size is a colossal statue 1 Statue of Unity 2018 world s tallest statue Gujarat IndiaHermes and the Infant Dionysus by Praxiteles 4th century BC Archaeological Museum of Olympia GreeceStatues have been produced in many cultures from prehistory to the present the oldest known statue dating to about 30 000 years ago Statues represent many different people and animals real and mythical Many statues are placed in public places as public art The world s tallest statue Statue of Unity is 182 metres 597 ft tall and is located near the Narmada dam in Gujarat India Contents 1 Colors 2 Historical periods 2 1 Prehistoric 2 2 Antiquity 2 2 1 Religion 2 2 2 Politics 2 3 Middle Ages 3 Renaissance 3 1 Modern Era 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksColors editAncient statues often show the bare surface of the material of which they are made For example many people associate Greek classical art with white marble sculpture but there is evidence that many statues were painted in bright colors 2 Most of the color has weathered off over time small remnants were removed during cleaning in some cases small traces remained that could be identified 2 A travelling exhibition of 20 coloured replicas of Greek and Roman works alongside 35 original statues and reliefs was held in Europe and the United States in 2008 Gods in Color Painted Sculpture of Classical Antiquity 3 Details such as whether the paint was applied in one or two coats how finely the pigments were ground or exactly which binding medium would have been used in each case all elements that would affect the appearance of a finished piece are not known 2 Richter goes so far as to say of classical Greek sculpture All stone sculpture whether limestone or marble was painted either wholly or in part 4 Medieval statues were also usually painted with some still retaining their original pigments The coloring of statues ceased during the Renaissance since excavated classical sculptures which had lost their coloring became regarded as the best models Historical periods editMain article Sculpture Prehistoric edit nbsp Urfa Man in the Sanliurfa Museum sandstone 1 80 metres 5 ft 11 in c 9 000 BCThe Venus of Berekhat Ram an anthropomorphic pebble found in northern Israel and dated to at least 230 000 years before present is claimed to be the oldest known statuette However researchers are divided as to whether its shape is derived from natural erosion or was carved by an early human 5 The Venus of Tan Tan a similar object of similar age found in Morocco has also been claimed to be a statuette 6 The Lowenmensch figurine and the Venus of Hohle Fels both from Germany are the oldest confirmed statuettes in the world dating to 35 000 40 000 years ago 7 8 9 The oldest known life sized statue is Urfa Man found in Turkey which is dated to around 9 000 BC Antiquity edit Religion edit Throughout history statues have been associated with cult images in many religious traditions from Ancient Egypt Ancient India Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome to the present Egyptian statues showing kings as sphinxes have existed since the Old Kingdom the oldest being for Djedefre c 2500 BC 10 The oldest statue of a striding pharaoh dates from the reign of Senwosret I c 1950 BC and is the Egyptian Museum Cairo 11 The Middle Kingdom of Egypt starting around 2000 BC witnessed the growth of block statues which then became the most popular form until the Ptolemaic period c 300 BC 12 The focal point of the cella or main interior space of a Roman or Greek temple was a statue of the deity it was dedicated to In major temples these could be several times life size Other statues of deities might have subordinate positions along the side walls The oldest statue of a deity in Rome was the bronze statue of Ceres in 485 BC 13 14 The oldest statue in Rome is now the statue of Diana on the Aventine 15 Politics edit For a successful Greek or Roman politician or businessman who donated considerable sums to public projects for the honour having a public statue preferably in the local forum or the grounds of a temple was an important confirmation of status and these sites filled up with statues on plinths mostly smaller than those of their 19th century equivalents Fragments in Rome of a bronze colossus of Constantine and the marble colossus of Constantine show the enormous scale of some imperial statues other examples are recorded notably one of Nero The wonders of the world include several statues from antiquity with the Colossus of Rhodes and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia among the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Middle Ages edit While sculpture generally flourished in European Medieval art the single statue was not one of the most common types except for figures of the Virgin Mary usually with Child and the corpus or body of Christ on crucifixes Both of these appeared in all size up to life size and by the late Middle Ages many churches even in villages had a crucifixion group around a rood cross The Gero Cross in Cologne is both one of the earliest and finest large figures of the crucified Christ As yet full size standing statues of saints and rulers were uncommon but tomb effigies generally lying down were very common for the wealthy from about the 14th century having spread downwards from royal tombs in the centuries before While Byzantine art flourished in various forms sculpture and statue making witnessed a general decline although statues of emperors continued to appear 16 An example was the statue of Justinian 6th century which stood in the square across from the Hagia Sophia until the fall of Constantinople in the 15th century 16 Part of the decline in statue making in the Byzantine period can be attributed to the mistrust the Church placed in the art form given that it viewed sculpture in general as a method for making and worshiping idols 16 While making statues was not subject to a general ban it was hardly encouraged in this period 16 Justinian was one of the last Emperors to have a full size statue made and secular statues of any size became virtually non existent after iconoclasm and the artistic skill for making statues was lost in the process Renaissance edit nbsp Michelangelo s David 1504 The Accademia Gallery Florence ItalyItalian Renaissance sculpture rightly regarded the standing statue as the key form of Roman art and there was a great revival of statues of both religious and secular figures to which most of the leading figures contributed led by Donatello and Michelangelo The equestrian statue a great technical challenge was mastered again and gradually statue groups These trends intensified in Baroque art when every ruler wanted to have statues made of themself and Catholic churches filled with crowds of statues of saints although after the Protestant Reformation religious sculpture largely disappeared from Protestant churches with some exceptions in large Lutheran German churches In England churches instead were filled with increasing elaborate tomb monuments for which the ultimate models were continental extravagances such as the Papal tombs in Rome those of the Doges of Venice or the French royal family In the late 18th and 19th century there was a growth in public open air statues of public figures on plinths As well as monarches politicians generals landowners and eventually artists and writers were commemorated World War I saw the war memorial previously uncommon become very widespread and these were often statues of generic soldiers Modern Era edit Starting with the work of Maillol around 1900 the human figures embodied in statues began to move away from the various schools of realism that had been followed for thousands of years The Futurist and Cubist schools took this metamorphism even further until statues often still nominally representing humans had lost all but the most rudimentary relationship to the human form By the 1920s and 1930s statues began to appear that were completely abstract in design and execution 17 The notion that the position of the hooves of horses in equestrian statues indicated the rider s cause of death has been disproved 18 19 Gallery edit nbsp Lowenmensch figurine from Hohlenstein Stadel Germany now in Ulmer Museum Ulm Germany possibly the oldest undisputed statuette Aurignacian era 40 000 BC 35 000 BC nbsp Two views of the Venus of Hohle Fels figurine 40 000 BC 35 000 BC 6 cm 2 4 in tall one of the earliest known undisputed examples of a depiction of a human being nbsp Venus of Dolni Vestonice ceramic figurine 29 000 BC 25 000 BC nbsp Venus of Willendorf one of the oldest known statuettes Upper Paleolithic 24 000 BC 22 000 BC nbsp Ain Ghazal statues c 7000 BC found in Ain Ghazal Jordan nbsp Great Sphinx of Giza c 2558 2532 BC the largest monolithic statue in the world standing 73 5 metres 241 ft long 6 metres 20 ft wide and 20 22 m 66 34 ft high Giza Egypt nbsp The Charioteer of Delphi 474 BC Delphi Archaeological Museum Greece nbsp Venus de Milo c 130 100 BC Greek the Louvre nbsp Laocoon and his Sons Greek Late Hellenistic c 160 BC and 20 BC White marble Vatican Museum nbsp Nara Daibutsu c 752 Nara Japan nbsp Gommateshvara Bahubali c 978 993 AD 57 feet 17 m high nbsp Moai of Easter Island facing inland Ahu Tongariki c 1250 1500 restored by Chilean archaeologist Claudio Cristino in the 1990s nbsp The Great Buddha of Kamakura c 1252 Japan nbsp Statue of Liberty formally Liberty Enlightening the World New York Harbor United States by Frederic Auguste Bartholdi c 1886 nbsp Auguste Rodin The Burghers of Calais 1884 c 1889 in Victoria Tower Gardens London England nbsp Henry Bain Smith s bronze of Robert Burns 1892 above Union Terrace Gardens Aberdeen Scotland nbsp A statue of Tsar Alexander II of Russia the Grand Duke of Finland at the Senate Square in Helsinki Finland sculpted by Walter Runeberg and Johannes Takanen 1894 nbsp Auguste Rodin The Thinker 1880 1904 nbsp Camille Claudel The Waltz 1889 1905 Musee Camille Claudel Nogent sur Seine France nbsp The Little Mermaid Copenhagen Denmark by Edvard Eriksen 1913 nbsp Statue of Jose Rizal at the Luneta Park Philippines c 1908 nbsp Thomas Brock John Everett Millais at Tate Britain 1905 nbsp Standing Nude 1912 by Amedeo Modigliani nbsp The statue of Hans Egede 1921 at Nuuk Greenland nbsp Christ the Redeemer 1931 Rio de Janeiro Brazil nbsp U S Marine Corps War Memorial located in Arlington Virginia by Felix de Weldon 1954 nbsp A closeup of the replica statue of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius 1981 the original c 200 AD is in the nearby Capitoline Museum Rome nbsp Spring Temple Buddha the world s second tallest statue overall 128 m 420 ft in height completed 2002 China nbsp Lord Murugan Statue Batu Caves Malaysia 140 feet 42 7 m nbsp Balance of Nature statue near VUDA Park Visakhapatnam nbsp Aristotle in the Aristotlepark of Stagira nbsp Sura and Baya Statue 1989 in center of Surabaya IndonesiaSee also editBronze sculpture Bust sculpture Equestrian sculpture Figurine History of sculpture List of statues List of tallest statues List of statues of Queen Victoria List of colossal sculpture in situ Mannequin Living statue Memorial Monument Statues of Gudea c 2100 BC Statuette Stone carving Stone sculpture Venus figurinesReferences edit Collins online dictionary Colossal 2 in figure sculpture approximately twice life size entry in the Getty Art amp Architecture Thesaurus Online a b c Archaeological Institute of America Carved in Living Color Archaeology org 23 June 2008 Retrieved 30 December 2012 Gods in Color Painted Sculpture of Classical Antiquity September 22 2007 Through January 20 2008 The Arthur M Sackler Museum 4 January 2009 Archived from the original on 4 January 2009 Retrieved 30 December 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Richter Gisela M A The Handbook of Greek Art Architecture Sculpture Gems Coins Jewellery Metalwork Pottery and Vase Painting Glass Furniture Textiles Paintings and Mosaics Phaidon Publishers Inc New York 1960 p 46 Venus of Berekhat Ram 230 700 000 BCE cork com Rincon Paul 23 May 2003 Oldest sculpture found in Morocco BBC News Retrieved 15 May 2009 Lion man takes pride of place as oldest statue by Rex Dalton Nature 425 7 4 September 2003 doi 10 1038 425007a also Nature News 4 September 2003 Ice Age Lion Man is world s earliest figurative sculpture by Martin Bailey The Art Newspaper 31 January 2013 It must be a woman The female depictions from Hohle Fels date to 40 000 years ago Universitat Tubingen July 22 2016 Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved July 26 2016 The Egyptian Museum in Cairo by Abeer El Shahawy and Farid Atiya 10 November 2005 ISBN 9771721836 page 117 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt by Donald B Redford 15 December 2000 ISBN 0195102347 page 230 Egyptian Statues by Gay Robins 4 March 2008 ISBN 0747805202 page 28 Famous Firsts in the Ancient Greek and Roman World by David Matz Jun 2000 ISBN 0786405996 page 87 The Art of Rome c 753 B C A D 337 by Jerome Jordan Pollitt 30 June 1983 ISBN 052127365X page 19 Samnium and the Samnites by E T Salmon 2 September 1967 ISBN 0521061857 page 181 a b c d Byzantine Art by Charles Bayet 1 October 2009 ISBN 1844846202 page 54 Giedion Welcker Carola Contemporary Sculpture An Evolution in Volume and Space A revised and Enlarged Edition Faber and Faber London 1961 pp X to XX Barbara Mikkelson 2 August 2007 Statue of Limitations Snopes com Retrieved 9 June 2011 Cecil Adams 6 October 1989 In statues does the number of feet the horse has off the ground indicate the fate of the rider The Straight Dope Chicago Reader Retrieved 9 June 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Statues UK Public Monument and Sculpture Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Statue amp oldid 1192530526, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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