Types of temples in ancient Greece and the order system. The order system of temples Architecture of Ancient Greece Fine art Teacher: L

"Culture and History of Greece" - The knowledge of the ancient Greeks about the origin of the universe and man is impressive. Greece. And nothing seems to change over time. Modern sculptors learn from the masterpieces of ancient Greek masters. Architects look up to the classical canons of ancient temples. The essence of things is revealed to people of a philosophical warehouse.

"Schools of Ancient Greece" - 4. Scientific knowledge in Ancient Greece. Lesson plan. School and Science in Ancient Greece. Lesson assignment. Hello children! The sons of free Greeks studied at schools from the age of 7. Socrates is the father of philosophy. One side of the stee-lo was sharp. Herodotus is the father of history. When teaching literacy, the teacher read aloud the text written on papyrus.

"Vase Painting of Ancient Greece" - A favorite topic in the art of Ancient Greece was a man. The art of D. Greece, as in all ancient countries, is associated with belief and mythology. Geometric style. EXERCISE. Black-figure style. In the 6th century, a new style of painting Greek vessels appeared in Athens. The surface of the red fired clay was painted with black lacquer.

"Theater of Ancient Greece" - Dithyrambs. Orchestra - a round platform on which the choir of the ancient theater performs. comedians. Theatron is the building of the Greek theater. Maenads. Dionysus. Ancient Greek Tragedians. Satires. Theater of the 4th century BC, Epidavros. Aristophanes. Parod - a passage that separates the sectors of the amphitheater. Orchestra. Proskenium - a narrow platform between the skene and the orchestra, on which the kings go.

"The Artistic Culture of Ancient Greece" - Kouros from Attica. Around 450 BC Marble Roman copy of a Greek bronze original. Doryphorus. The Acropolis is the social and cultural center of the Athenian state. Sculpture of the archaic period. Pericles. Nike of Samothrace. Erechtheion. BC.). order system. Around 530 BC Acropolis Museum.

"Olympic Games in Ancient Greece" - the birthplace of the Olympic Games. Fist fight. Pentathlon: Running Long jump Javelin throw Discus throw Wrestling. The time of the games. The next three days were devoted to competitions. Olympic Games in Ancient Greece (grade 5). History of Ancient Greece. The award is a laurel wreath. Sports days. Dedication to the Olympic Games.

In total there are 19 presentations in the topic



The famous symbol of ancient Greece Acropolis built by the genius Phidias on a high hill in Athens.



Acropolis in Greek means "Upper City".

In ancient times, the Acropolis in Greece served the same purpose as the Kremlin in Rus': in a fenced area were the main shrines and treasures, the treasury of the state, and those who ruled the city were located here. The acropolis consisted of several magnificent buildings. It was placed on a hill, as if specially created by nature - a steep hill with a flat top.


Citizens who rise here on the days of great holidays first passed through Propylaea. This building with columns served as the front gate. In the side outbuildings were the spiritual treasures of Athens: an old library and an art gallery. A small but very beautiful temple was built right there. Goddess of Victory - Nike .





Parthenon Temple of Athena

Pericles, the famous ruler of Athens, under whom this Greek Kremlin was built, said very well about the Parthenon: “We love wisdom without effeminacy and beauty without whimsicality.” And, indeed, the sacred house of the Virgin Warrior is distinguished not by decorations, but by its severity and grandeur.


The last masterpiece of the Acropolis was the temple of Poseidon and Athena Erechtheion . According to legend, the temple stood on the site of the dispute between Athena and Poseidon. An ancient olive tree grew near the temple. The Greeks believed that it grew from the shaft of Athena's spear.




The main type of temple in Greek architecture was peripter (feathered), that is, surrounded by columns around the perimeter


Order- the system of relationships between the bearing and bearing parts of the building (rack-and-beam system)

entablature

architrave

capital

column shaft

stereobat


Order systems

Doric Ionic Corinthian Tuscan Composite


The capital is the top of a column.

The ancient Greek architectural theorist Vitruvius compared the Doric order "with the strength and beauty of the male body", as an expression of his strength, spiritual and physical. Sometimes, instead of a column in the Doric order, a male statue was installed, the so-called. atlas

Doric order


The plasticity and proportions of the orders reflected the search for images in the likeness of the human structure.

Volutes

The Ionic order was compared by Vitruvius to "the sophistication of women, their adornments and proportionality." It is no coincidence that in the Ionic order columns were sometimes replaced by female figures, the so-called. caryatids.



Corinthian order

The Corinthian order is the lightest, most slender of the three orders of the Greek system. In the time of Vitruvius, it was customary to symbolize the Corinthian column as an image of a beautiful girl, and the order itself as an expression of her tenderness and purity.

flutes







Creative task.

Design and draw a fabulous architectural order.






Resources used:

  • http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/Classics/roman_provinces/greece/Acropolis.JPG
  • http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/9/nadine462007.3/0_3cce_f7656a00_XL
  • http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/6005/sv-bozhko.0/0_643be_92b0d17e_L.jpg
  • http://www.piterra.ru/gallery/catalog/full_de3e310652.jpg


art lesson

8th grade

Baturina Lyubov Leonidovna


  • ORDER - a certain combination of load-bearing and carried parts of a rack-and-beam structure, their structure and artistic processing.
  • The order includes load-bearing parts (a column with a capital, a base, sometimes with a pedestal) and carried parts (architrave, frieze and cornice, which together make up the entablature).




Doric order, which appeared at the beginning of the 6th century. BC, can be considered the main

in the development of Greek architecture.

Strict and solemnly monumental Doric order, which appeared at the beginning

6th c. BC e., consists of the following parts:

three-stage base - stereobat; carrier column.

Vertically, the column trunk was divided by flutes (vertical grooves) with sharp edges.

The column ends with a capital, consisting of an echina (flattened pillow) and an abacus.

(tetrahedral plate.) of the carried part - the entablature, including the architrave

(horizontal beam resting on columns), frieze with alternating triglyphs

(slab with vertical grooves) and metopes (slab made of stone

or ceramics decorated with relief or painting) and a cornice.

The Doric style of architecture developed mainly in the Peloponnese and in the western

areas of the Greek world (Sicily).

The forms of the Doric style were influenced by Mycenaean architecture.




Ionic order

The Ionic order (appeared around the middle of the 6th century BC) opposes the strict geometricity, massive simplicity, full of inner strength, the imperious assertion of the masculine principle in art, the desire for decorativeness, lightness of forms, smoothness of lines, its more feminine inspiration. The Ionic order differed from the Doric in proportions, as well as in the number and complexity of details.

Thin columns with a base and high flutes, but hewn along the edges, were crowned with capitals with curls, shaped like ram's horns - volutes.

Above the volutes there was an impost (thin horizontal strip). The architrave included three bands protruding one above the other (fascia). The frieze was decorated with a relief image. In the cornice, decorations were often carved, shaped like eggs (ionics), leaves (climitium) and beads.

The Ionic style developed mainly in Attica and in the eastern regions of the Mediterranean.

The functions of both of these orders were the same - the columns were built in order to support the horizontal floor beams. The difference was only in proportions and decorations. Later, the famous Roman architect Vetruvius suggested that these orders are the embodiment of the male and female principles. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that when the Greeks installed statues instead of columns, Doric columns were replaced by statues of men (Atlanteans), and Ionic columns by statues of women (caryatids).

The Doric and Ionic orders were widely used in all eras of the existence of Ancient Greece, both in the construction of residential buildings or small galleries, and in the construction of large temples.




- Symbolizes the image of a beautiful girl, an expression of her tenderness and purity.

-In multi-storey buildings, a light Corinthian order occupies the top position.

- Apply to solemn museum buildings, concert halls, theaters, etc.


Corinthian order .

The Corinthian order appeared later than the previous two and in many ways resembled the Ionic one.

The Corinthian order was developed from the 5th century BC and finally took shape at the end of the 4th century. BC e.

The proportions of the Corinthian order are similar to the Ionic ones.

Its characteristic feature was a high capital, decorated with relief images.

leaves of anakfa, a poisonous plant.

The great soul of Greek architecture found its perfect embodiment in the column.

with its strength and harmony, bold take-off and precise balance in the name of higher harmony.






in capitals composite orders, there is some combination of the Corinthian and Ionic orders. It symbolizes lightness, elegance.

They are used to decorate the halls of palaces, to express splendor, wealth, elegance.




slide 1

slide 2

About the Greek house of the 6th and 5th centuries. BC. little is known. We know that it had a very modest size and a simple design. Several rooms, where they cooked, dined, washed and slept, surrounded the courtyard, through which the rooms were illuminated. In the front rooms, the floors were often decorated with mosaics; utensils, especially ceramic vases, were distinguished by the refinement of forms and the subtlety of painting. All the achievements of ancient Greek architecture are associated with the construction of temples. The Olympic gods, wise and perfect, must also have worthy dwellings - temples. Residential buildings (even of the richest citizens) were fragile and modest. residential architecture

slide 3

The temple, dedicated to the patron god of the city, was built with the money of the city-polis and belonged to the whole society. Nominally remaining the dwelling of God, it served earthly, public purposes: it was the repository of the city treasury and artistic values. The temple was erected on the highest place, usually on the acropolis, dominating the city buildings, in the center of the city square, which served as a place for public meetings, festivities, and religious processions.

slide 4

HOMEWORK Write out the meaning of the terms in a notebook and indicate in the figure: Entablament - Base - Architrave - Frieze - Cornice - Metope - Flutes - Pediment - Triglyph -

slide 5

TYPES OF GREEK TEMPLE Temple in Antes Prostyle Amphiprostyle - peripter - dipter - false peripter (double peripter) (Roman)

slide 6

Temple of Poseidon at Paestum The classic, most common type of Greek temple was the peripter (which means "feathered") - a rectangular temple, surrounded on all sides by columns. An example of such a temple is the Temple of Poseidon at Paestum. Plan of a Greek temple. Peripter.

Slide 7

A - Doric, B - Ionic, C - Corinthian. The numbers show parts of the order: 1 - cornice, 2 - frieze, 3 - architrave (cornice, frieze and architrave together form an entablature), 4 - capital, 5 - column trunk, 6 - base.

Slide 8

Slide 9

As a result of the long evolution of the temple, an architectural system developed, later called an order (which means "order"). An order is a system of relationships between columns (bearing part) and entablature (bearing part). TOP PARTS OF THE ORDER: ARCHITRAVE FRISE CORNICE form an ENTABLEMENT

slide 10

a column placed on a base or without a base, standing on a stylobate (upper slab of a stone base); the column is decorated with a capital, on which the supporting beam - architrave rests, which, together with a decorative frieze and cornice, forms an entablature. The Greek architectural order consisted of the following elements:

slide 11

DORICA ORDER In the era of archaism, the order developed in two versions: Doric and Ionic. Temple of Athena at Paestum. Built around 570. The Doric order developed in the Peloponnese and in the Greek colonies in Sicily and southern Italy.

slide 12

DORICA ORDER The Doric peripter stood on a stone base - a stereobat (usually of three steps). The column, decorated with vertical grooves - flutes, did not have a base, it was completed by a simple round pillow, with a square slab above it. According to the Greeks, the Doric order is the embodiment of the idea of ​​masculinity, rigor, simplicity. The columns of Doric temples were subsequently often replaced by male figures (atlantes).

slide 13

IONIC ORDER Caryatids of the Erechtheion Temple The Ionic order is most widespread in Asia Minor and on the islands of the Aegean Sea. The shaft of an Ionic column was originally thinner than that of a Doric column, confirming its origin from a wooden structure. The Ionic column has a base. Temple of Nike Apteros

slide 14

IONIC ORDER The Ionic order was lighter, more elegant, and more elegant. The slender colonnade had a base at its base and was decorated with a capital in the form of two graceful curls, which are called volutes. Columns of the Ionic order were often replaced by female figures (caryatids).

slide 15

CORINTHIAN ORDER in the era of the classics, the third order was developed - Corinthian, close in proportion to the Ionic, but even more slender and festive.

slide 16

CORINTHIAN ORDER By the end of the 5th c. BC. a third architectural order arose, the Corinthian. Its columns are as graceful as those of the Ionic order, and the entablature is more magnificent. The Corinthian capital resembles an inverted bell, composed of two rows of acanthus leaves with spiral vine tendrils at the corners.

slide 17

slide 18

HOMEWORK: The Greek architectural order was used not only in ancient architecture, but also became the main element of Renaissance, Baroque, Classicism architecture. WRITE IN THE TABLE IN THE NOTEBOOK THE HISTORICAL BUILDINGS KNOWN TO YOU, WHERE THE SYSTEM OF GREEK ORDERS IS APPLIED ON THE LEFT, AND THE YEAR OF CREATION ON THE RIGHT.

slide 19

Son of Kronos and Rhea. Lord of the gods, progenitor of gods and people. Temple of Zeus at Olympia DEFINE TEMPLE TYPE AND ORDER Temple of Zeus at Olympia, built between 468 and 456 BC BC. architect Libon, had the value of a pan-Hellenic sanctuary and was the largest temple in all of Poloponnese. The temple is almost completely destroyed, but on the basis of excavations and descriptions of ancient authors, its general appearance can be reconstructed quite accurately.