Archaic Colors
Commencing Tuesday 31 July 2012 and for the next twelve months,
the Acropolis Museum wants to conduct research on its unique collection of
archaic statues, which retain their colors to a small or large degree, and to
open a very extensive discussion with the public and various experts on color,
its technical issues, its detection using new technologies, its experimental
use on marble surfaces, its digital reconstruction, its meaning, as well as the
archaic period’s aesthetic perception of color.
So far, scientific research
into the color found on ancient sculpture has made great progress and reached
surprising conclusions that to a large degree refute the stereotypical
assumptions regarding ancient sculpture. It turns out that color, far from
being just a simple decorative element, added to the sculpture’s aesthetic
quality.
For ancient Greeks and their society, color constituted a way to characterize
various attributes. The blond hair of the gods projected their power; the brown
skin of warriors and athletes was a sign of virtue and valor, while the white
skin of the korai expressed the grace and radiance of youth.
The Μuseum’s initiative on Archaic Colors is based on very careful observation, on spectroscopic analysis, on special photography sessions, on efforts to reproduce the colors of antiquity and then to apply them on Parian marble, and naturally, on searching through written sources for valuable information on the pigments.
The statues’ crisp, saturated colors, on bright garments and tender bodies, combined with the rich jewelry, frequently made of metal, and elaborately curled hair created a singular aesthetic pleasure, making the archaic statues “wonderful to behold” for the people of the period.
http://www.theacropolismuseum.gr/
The Μuseum’s initiative on Archaic Colors is based on very careful observation, on spectroscopic analysis, on special photography sessions, on efforts to reproduce the colors of antiquity and then to apply them on Parian marble, and naturally, on searching through written sources for valuable information on the pigments.
The statues’ crisp, saturated colors, on bright garments and tender bodies, combined with the rich jewelry, frequently made of metal, and elaborately curled hair created a singular aesthetic pleasure, making the archaic statues “wonderful to behold” for the people of the period.
http://www.theacropolismuseum.gr/
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario