Because they are the same belief... and have the big bald guy. Its their own god
The oldest Greek sculptures known were made by anonymous artists.
Romans created more realistic sculptures, and portraits. Greek sculptures idealized the humans form, using athletes as models of preform.
more realistic and emotional.
because michelangelo was nothing more by just copy paste Ancient Greek sculptures
The ancient Greeks.
In English letters that most resemble Greek, it is Tnc Jonies.
Ancient Greek sculptures were primarily made from materials like marble and bronze, rather than limestone and cement. While some sculptures and architectural elements used limestone, marble was favored for its durability and aesthetic qualities. Cement, as we understand it today, was not used in the same way during ancient Greek times; instead, they employed other binding materials for construction. Overall, marble and bronze were the dominant materials for Greek sculptures.
city states
Greek sculptures are realistic in form, that means: They always look like whatever the sculpture is supposed to portrait (ex.: if it's an sculpture of a human figure, it looks like a human figure, etc...) Now, a more accurate description of Greek Sculptures would be that they are "Idealistic. Greek sculptures always portrayed men and women in a very idealist way. All men were very fit, with bulging muscles and very strong. All women were extremely beautiful and graceful.
Some of the most famous Greek statues and sculptures are "Athena" and "Zeus."
I've confirmed one previous answer: "thought it was Czech for hut" an authoritative source. I have no intelligence on the possibility of its being Greek for Buddha as shown in #01 below. NEH 26Oct08 01 - Βουδα could be the Greek for Buddha.
Greek statues were naturalistic, while the Egyptian ones were stylised. Roman sculpture in the Republican period was highly realistic portraiture (busts). In the period of rule by emperors the Romans adopted full bodied statues and they were modelled on the Hellenistic sculpture of the Greeks.