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Chapter 9 - Sculpture

from Part II - The Art of the Aegean Early Bronze Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2022

Jean-Claude Poursat
Affiliation:
University of Clermont-Ferrand
Carl Knappett
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
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Summary

Cycladic marble figurines have generated so much interest that they have become the focus of a separate field of enquiry within Aegean art. This inflated interest is relatively recent: few marble figures were known before the end of the nineteenth century; the first museum acquisitions (British Museum, Dresden, and Karlsruhe) date from the 1840s, and we have to wait until the explorations of the English traveller James Theodore Bent in 1883–4 for a renewed interest (J. Bent, JHS 5, 1884, 42–59). They are first mentioned in studies of Greek sculpture from this period, and are thought of, in comparison to Classical art, as ‘primitive’. For Collignon, ‘these first attempts at sculpture take us back to a distant time when barbarism still held sway in the lands that will one day be Greece.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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References

Further Reading

Fitton, 1984: Fitton, L. ed., Cycladica: Studies in Memory of N. Goulandris, London.Google Scholar
Getz-Gentle, 2001: Getz-Gentle, P., Personal Styles in Early Cycladic Sculpture, Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Getz-Preziosi, 1987: Getz-Preziosi, P., Sculptors of the Cyclades: Individual and Tradition in the Third Millennium B.C., Ann Arbor, MI.Google Scholar
Krause, 1992: Krause, S., Die Typologie der frühminoischen Idole. Versuch einer evolutionären Typologie, Hamburg.Google Scholar
Landau, 1977: Landau, J., Les représentations anthropomorphes de la région méditerranéenne (IIIe–Ier mill.), 1977.Google Scholar
Marangou, 1990: Marangou, L. ed., Cycladic Culture: Naxos in the 3rd Millennium B.C., Athens.Google Scholar
Renfrew, 2007: Renfrew, C. et al., Keros, Dhaskalio Kavos: The Investigations of 1987–88. Keros vol. 1; The Marble Finds from Kavos and the Archaeology of Ritual. The Sanctuary on Keros and the Origins of Aegean Ritual Practice: The Excavations of 2006–2008, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Renfrew, 2015: Renfrew, C. et al., Kavos and the Special Deposits: The Sanctuary on Keros and the Origins of Aegean Ritual Practice – The Excavations of 2006–2008, vol. 2, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Renfrew, 2018: Renfrew, C. et al., The Marble Finds from Kavos and the Archaeology of Ritual: The Sanctuary on Keros and the Origins of Aegean Ritual Practice – The Excavations of 2006–2008, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sotirakopoulou, 2005: Sotirakopoulou, P., The ‘Keros Hoard’: Myth or Reality? Searching for the Lost Pieces of a Puzzle, Athens.Google Scholar
Stampolidis, and Sotirakopoulou, 2017: Stampolidis, N., Sotirakopoulou, P., Cycladica in Crete. Cycladic and Cycladicizing Figurines Within Their Archaeological Context, Athens; Rethymno.Google Scholar
Takaoglu, 2005: Takaoglu, T., A Chalcolithic Marble Workshop at Kulaksizlar in Western Anatolia, Oxford.Google Scholar
Thimme, 1977: Thimme, J., Getz-Preziosi, P., Otto, B. eds., Art and Culture of the Cyclades in the Third Millennium BC, Chicago, IL; London.Google Scholar

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  • Sculpture
  • Jean-Claude Poursat
  • Translated by Carl Knappett, University of Toronto
  • Book: The Art and Archaeology of the Aegean Bronze Age
  • Online publication: 19 May 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108630672.010
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  • Sculpture
  • Jean-Claude Poursat
  • Translated by Carl Knappett, University of Toronto
  • Book: The Art and Archaeology of the Aegean Bronze Age
  • Online publication: 19 May 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108630672.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Sculpture
  • Jean-Claude Poursat
  • Translated by Carl Knappett, University of Toronto
  • Book: The Art and Archaeology of the Aegean Bronze Age
  • Online publication: 19 May 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108630672.010
Available formats
×