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1: Introduction

  • Page ID
    200690
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    This is a survey of art and architecture focusing on Europe and Northern African regions from the Prehistoric through the Age of Gothic. It highlights the rise and fall of civilizations and empires and the creative art they used for enjoyment, power, and religion. Some of the art created remains quite obscure since writing and other documentation is missing from the record. At other times, ancient civilizations provide a plethora of writings and records allowing historians to piece together a more accurate account of the motivations behind the creation of their art. We benefit from the early writings of historians like Homer and Herodotus, as well as the writers and chroniclers of classical Athens and ancient Rome. For instance, the great Athenian ruler Pericles is the man behind the concept and construction of the Parthenon. His life is chronicled by Thucydides and later Plutarch. Cuneiform writings and hieroglyphs, although important to understand the cultures of the Near East and Egypt, do little to enlighten us about specific details and the personalities of the artists. Writing and having a historical record help enormously in understanding the context of art and, unfortunately, much of art and architecture of this survey does not have writings that help explain the context. Advances in science have helped art historians and archeologists unlock the secrets of pre-historic, ancient, and Medieval art and architecture. This has helped explain several important facts such as the materials used, and a more accurate time the art was created adding to the knowledge of otherwise factually elusive art.

     

         


    This page titled 1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Michael Leonard.

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