Art of Ancient Egypt 3 Ts Tombs Temples
Art of Ancient Egypt 3 T’s: Tombs, Temples, and Timelessness
Essential Knowledge • Funerary objects are the focus of most Egyptian art and architecture • Monumental stone sculpture is a specialty of the Egyptians • Strict stylistic formulas were applied to the gods and pharaohs
Four Periods • Predynastic 5000 -2950 • Early Dynastic 2950 -2575 • Old Kindom 2575 -2150 BCE • New Kingdom 1540 -1075 BCE – Amarna Period 1353 -1336
Gift of the Nile • Longest river in the world • Made civilization possible – Calm, predictable • Kept land fertile • Annual floods
Written Language • Pictographs became hieroglyphs • Hieroglyphs represented objects, ideas, or sounds • Deciphered through Rosetta Stone
Religion • Polytheistic • Gods were animal, human or both • Strong believers in the afterlife
Triple Concept of Spirit • Ka-Soul of deceased • Akh-Lived in heavens as spirit • Ba-in and out of touch with deceased. – Human head, bird body.
Burial Method Progression Body preservation for KA 1. Sand 2. Mastabas * 3. Stepped Pyramid * 4. Pyramid * Usually in Necropolisis
Mastaba Layout
Stepped Pyramid of Djoser
Great Pyramids of Giza
Mummification Egyptians developed embalming technique 4 step mummification process: 1. Organ Removal 2. Body Treatment 3. Wrapping 4. Protection
What was in a tomb? • Mummy in sarcophagus • Food, drink, clothing, utensils for the afterlife • Sometimes slaves, ushtabis • Images of deceased-ka statue
The Pharaohs • Deified with absolute power • Pharaohs communicated with gods • Sons of RA, the sun god. • RA’s emblem was a pyramidal stone, hence pyramid shaped tombs.
Painting/Relief Conventions • Profile head, legs, feet • Frontal eye, torso, arms • ¾ view waist
Sculpture Conventions • Solid, static, stiff, cube-like • Slim, young, beautiful, timeless
Canon of Proportions • Strict set of rules for figures • Grid always drawn 18 units high • Figure drawn over grid
Palette of Narmer Predynastic c. 3000
• Oldest historical narrative. Slate. Both ceremonial and historical. • Hieroglyphic labels and symbols help to identify everyone • Hathor at top-goddess mother of all pharaohs • Horus (falcon) symbol of Upper Egypt, papyrus symbol of Lower Egypt.
• Two sided palette commemorate Narmer’s victorious unification of upper and lower Egypt. • One of first historical artworks • EVERY image shows Narmer’s POWER. • Registers/hierarchical scale/low relief • Composite view
Seated Scribe Old Kingdom 2620 -2500 BCE Painted limestone
• Features are more realistic than idealized • Formality is relaxed and realism is increased as a human subject’s importance is decreased. • Sedentary vocation-free from hard labor
Great Pyramids of Giza Old Kingdom 2550 -2490 BCE
• Necropolis complex • 3 pyramids-Khufu, Khafre, Menkaura • Khufu=Kafre’s father • Khafre=Menkaura’s father
• Pharaohs buried in pyramids • Each side is oriented toward a point on the compass. • Face sunset-symbolizes death • Part of huge necropolis
The Great Sphinx, from Giza
• Body of a lion and head of a pharaoh • In Khafre’s complex-portrait of him? • Intelligence/human and strength/beast • Originally brightly painted to stand out in the desert. • Immovable, eternal silent guardian of the tomb. • Carved in situ
Seated Khafre, 2500 BCE, Old Kingdom
Menkaura and a Queen Old Kingdom c. 2490 -2472 BCE
• Made of stone • Valley temple statue • Portrayed with idealized bodies • Gaze confidently and serenely into the future
• “Eternal stillness” • One leg forward, influenced early Greek artists • Single unit
New Kingdom • Country began to gain its strength back politically and economically from Middle Kingdom • At the height of the New Kingdom, rulers undertook extensive building programs along the length of the Nile
New Kingdom Architecture • Temples built to honor the gods and emphasize pharaoh’s power • Pylons and obelisks at entrance • Outdoor-Indoor as it becomes more exclusive
• Amun-god of the air and sky • Re=Ra • Temple of Amun-Re: – Largest columned temple in world – 134 columns, 24 meters high
Front of Temple
Reconstruction Drawing of Hypostyle Hall, Temple of Amun-Re at Karnak New Kingdom
• Hypostyle Hall-Columns support the roof • Only the priest and the pharaoh were allowed in the hypostyle hall. • Hypostyle hall led to the sanctuary where the god’s statue was kept and cared for • Allowed some light to come in
• Base of column waist high • Columns-sunken reliefs
Flower and Bud Columns, Great Temple of Amun at Karnak New Kingdom
• Capitals-top of column • Inspired by papyrus with open and closed buds • Within hypostyle hall • Egyptian columns are based on plant forms
Hatshepsut • History’s first great female ruler • Crowned King of Egypt • “Female Horus” • Often portrayed as sphinx • Represented in male pharaoh attire
Funerary Temple of Hatshepsut New Kingdom c. 1470 BCE
• 3 colonnaded terraces and 2 ramps – Terraces originally had gardens • Visually coordinated with the natural setting– long horizontals and verticals – patterns of dark and light • Harmonized with its landscape*
Hatshepsut's Sphinx New Kingdom
• Sculptors portrayed her as having male and female characteristics. • In traditional pharaoh dress • Part pharaoh part lion: again, intelligence of human with strength of a lion
Hatshepsut with offering jars New Kingdom
• Destroyed, put back together • Offering to RA, only knelt before gods-not mortals • Anatomically male
Amarna Period • Amenhotep rules, controversial • Monotheistic-Aton-represented only as a sun disk • Changed name to Akhenaton (servant of Aton) • Defaced all the other god images, emptied temples.
Amarna Style • • Naturalistic Representations Refined Sensuality Unprecedented Intimacy Specific features – Thin arms – Prominent bellies – Full lips – Heavily lidded eyes – Dreamy expression
Akhenaton and His Family Amarna
• Sunken relief • Unprecedented for Egyptian royal figuresrelaxed poses, curved outlines, flowing drapery • Humanity of royal family* • Aton-sun disk-rays turn into hands. Ankh giving the breath of life
King Tutankhamen-New Kingdom
• Inside famous tomb discovered in 1922 by Howard Carter • Mummified body inside coffin • Gold coffin 6’ 7” • Smooth idealized featurestraditional
Return to Tradition • King Tut was the son of Akenaton • Rejected monotheism • Returned Egypt to polytheistic religion and traditional representation of pharaohs • Discovery of nearly complete tomb in 1922 by Howard Carter
Last Judgment of Hu-Nefer, from the Book of the Dead New Kingdom
• Page from Book of the Dead – book of spells and charms on papyrus • Anubis weighs heart/soul against feather. If guilty, hippo/lion hybrid eats heart. • God Thoth is the stenographer of events in hieroglyphics, which he invented • Osiris enthroned to subject the deceased to a day of judgment
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