Ancient and Classical Art
Ancient and classical art covers the visual cultures of the ancient Near East, Egypt, the Aegean, and the Greek and Roman worlds, whose forms and ideals shaped much of later Western art.
Definition
The branch of art history concerned with the art and architecture of the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern world, conventionally extending from the rise of urban civilizations to the end of Roman antiquity in late antiquity.
Scope
This area studies architecture, sculpture, painting, and the minor arts of antiquity, from the early civilizations of Mesopotamia and Egypt through the Bronze Age Aegean to the Greek and Roman traditions, including questions of style, patronage, religion, and the transmission of the classical inheritance.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How did monumental art and architecture serve religion, kingship, and the state in ancient societies?
- What stylistic ideals defined Greek art, and how did they evolve from the Archaic to the Hellenistic period?
- How did Roman art absorb, adapt, and transmit Greek and Etruscan precedents?
- How do we reconstruct lost works and meanings from fragmentary surviving evidence?
Key theories
- Classical ideal and the canon
- The interpretation that Greek art of the Classical period pursued idealized proportion and naturalism, establishing a canon of beauty and the human figure that became normative for the later Western tradition.
- Stylistic development from Archaic to Hellenistic
- The narrative, central to survey art history, that Greek art moved from rigid Archaic schematism through Classical balance to Hellenistic dynamism and emotion, used as a framework for dating and analysis.
History
The systematic study of ancient art began in the 18th century with Johann Joachim Winckelmann, often called the father of art history, whose History of the Art of Antiquity (1764) proposed a developmental account of Greek style. Subsequent excavation across the Mediterranean, the growth of museum collections, and the disciplines of classical archaeology and philology established the field, which continues to integrate archaeological context with stylistic and iconographic analysis.
Debates
- Originals versus Roman copies
- Because many famous Greek bronzes survive only as Roman marble copies, scholars debate how faithfully these reproductions transmit lost originals and how to reconstruct Greek sculpture from them.
Key figures
- Johann Joachim Winckelmann
- John Boardman
- Jerome J. Pollitt
- Fred S. Kleiner
Related topics
Seminal works
- kleiner2020
- boardman1996
- pollitt1972
Frequently asked questions
- Who is regarded as the founder of art history?
- Johann Joachim Winckelmann is often called the founder of art history for his 18th-century developmental study of ancient, especially Greek, art.
- Why do we have so few original Greek bronze statues?
- Most bronzes were melted down in antiquity and the Middle Ages, so many celebrated Greek works survive only through later Roman marble copies.