Kritios Boy

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The Kritios boy belongs to the Late Archaic period and is considered the precursor to the later classical sculptures of athletes. The Kritios or Kritian boy was thus named because it is attributed to Kritios who worked together with Nesiotes (Harmodius and Aristogeiton) or their scholarship, from around 480 BC. The statue is made of marble and is considerably smaller than life-size at 1.17 m (3 ft 10 ins).

It is on display in the archaeological museum of the Acropolis in Athens (Inv. no. 698). The statue is an excavated found object at the Athenian Acropolis. The torso was found in 1865 while excavating the foundation of the museum at the Athenian Acropolis. The head of this statue was found twenty-three years later between the museum and the Acropolis south wall in the youngest stage of the rubble of Persian Wars. This fact, in conjunction with the analysis of its style, is essential to the dating of the statue. [1]

With the Kritios Boy (Ephebos) the Greek artist has mastered a complete understanding of how the different parts of the body act as a system. The statue supports its body on one leg, the left, whiles the right one is bent at the knee in a relaxing state. This stance forces a chain of anatomical events as the pelvis is pushed diagonally upwards on the left side, the right buttock relaxes, the spine acquires an "S" curve, and the shoulder line dips on the left to counteract the action of the pelvis (contraposto). In the Classics belongs it to the "Canon of Polyclitus" and his own scholarship.[2]

It set the rule for later sculptors like Praxiteles and Lysippos. But the Ponderation is later visible stronger than on the Kritios boy.

The Kritios Boy exhibits a number of other critical innovations that distinguish it from the Archaic Kouroi from around 7th and 6th century BC that paved its way. The muscular and skeletal structure are depicted with unforced life-like accuracy, with the rib cage naturally expanded as if in the act of breathing, with a relaxed attitude and hips which are distinctly narrower. As a final fore bearer of the classical period, the "smile" of Archaic statues has been completely replaced by the accurate rendering of the lips and the austere expression that characterized the transitional, or "Severe" period from the Archaic to the Classical era. It was created at same era like the Blond Kouros's Head of the Acropolis and the famous group of the "Tyrannicides" Harmodius and Aristogeiton. A good example for on comparison furthermore is the marble statue of Ephebos of the Sicilian useum in Agrigento.

http://academic.reed.edu/humanities/110Tech/BodyLanguage/images/largest/kritiosboy2.jpg

  1. ^ Jeffrey M. Hurwitt, The Kritios Boy: Discovery, Reconstruction, and Date, in: American Journal of Archaeology 93 (1989), pp. 41-80. For the destruction of the Athenian Acropolis generally: Martin Steskal, Der Zerstörungsbefund 480/79 der Athener Akropolis: Eine Fallstudie zum etablierten Chronologygerüst, Hamburg 2004.
  2. ^ Gisela M.A. Richter, Handbuch der griechischen Kunst, Köln-Berlin 1966 (Phaidon), p. 95. - John Boardman (Editor), The Oxford History of Classical Art, Oxford 1993, pp. 87-89.

Before you delete this comment next time, can I share some of my knowledge on the sculpture

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