Greek art is traditionally divided into several periods: the Geometric, Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic. The Hellenistic period, which followed the Classical period, lasted from around 323 BCE to approximately 31 BCE. This era is characterized by increased expression, intricate detail, and a focus on individualism and emotion in art. After the Hellenistic period, Greek art was influenced by Roman styles, leading to the decline of distinctly Greek artistic traditions.
The transitional period in Greek art is 480 to 450 B. C.
The Hellenistic Period.
She worked during the last part of the 19th centure, the period of Impressionism.
Classical art!
The human figure and motion.
it occured last year (2001)
The transitional period in Greek art is 480 to 450 B. C.
Archaic Greece
all periods
The Hellenistic Period.
Hellenistic art was not an art movement. It is the last period of Greek art. It followed the period of classical Greek art. The Hellenistic statues idealised the Greek kings of the Hellenistic States: the Ptolemaic kingdom of Egypt, eastern Libya and the eastern part of Turkey's Mediterranean coast, the Seleucid Empire (Syria, Lebanon Palestine, Iraq and the stretch from eastern Turkey to the Indus River in Pakistan) and the kingdom of Pergamon (in western Turkey). These kingdoms were ruled by Greek dynasties following Alexander the Great's conquest of the Persian Empire. Hence the term Hellenistic Sates. The term Hellenistic also refers to ancient Greece's last historical period from Alexander the Great's conquest to Rome's conquest of Greece. The Romans did not patronise Hellenistic art. They adopted it. It became the art of the Romans as well.
the human figure and motion.
Art, literature, language, statuary.
the art style is based on a classical time period in which there was once the nine Muses of art, but the titan Prometheus gifted man with art which truly means that the Greek and Roman art style is now based off of classical art by: A.S.
It was sophisticated art direction done by the play writers of ancient Greek time.
In the Classical period, Greek art portrayed the human body as perfect and life-like. Later, during the Hellenistic period, Greek sculptors changed to portray the human body as realistic, including adding blush to the cheeks and color to the eyes.
16th -17th century