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  2. Kouros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kouros

    Kouros. Kouros ( Ancient Greek: κοῦρος, pronounced [kûːros], plural kouroi) is the modern term [ a] given to free-standing Ancient Greek sculptures that depict nude male youths. They first appear in the Archaic period in Greece and are prominent in Attica and Boeotia, with a less frequent presence in many other Ancient Greek ...

  3. Classical sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_sculpture

    Apart from the heads of portrait sculptures, the bodies were highly idealized but achieved an unprecedented degree of naturalism. In addition to free standing statues, the term classical sculpture incorporates relief work (such as the famous Elgin Marbles of the Parthenon) and the flatter bas-relief style. Whereas sculptural works emphasized ...

  4. Ancient Greek sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_sculpture

    Ancient Greek sculpture. Riders from the Parthenon Frieze, around 440 BC. The sculpture of ancient Greece is the main surviving type of fine ancient Greek art as, with the exception of painted ancient Greek pottery, almost no ancient Greek painting survives. Modern scholarship identifies three major stages in monumental sculpture in bronze and ...

  5. Sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sculpture

    Modern and contemporary art have added a number of non-traditional forms of sculpture, including sound sculpture, light sculpture, environmental art, environmental sculpture, street art sculpture, kinetic sculpture (involving aspects of physical motion), land art, and site-specific art. Sculpture is an important form of public art.

  6. The Vision of Constantine (Bernini) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vision_of_Constantine...

    The Vision of Constantine is an equestrian sculpture by the Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini, located in the Scala Regia by St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City. Originally commissioned as a free standing work of art within St. Peter's itself, the sculpture was finally unveiled in 1670 as an integral part of the Scala Regia - Bernini's ...

  7. Art of Mathura - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_Mathura

    The Art of Mathura refers to a particular school of Indian art, almost entirely surviving in the form of sculpture, starting in the 2nd century BCE, which centered on the city of Mathura, in central northern India, during a period in which Buddhism, Jainism together with Hinduism flourished in India. [5] Mathura "was the first artistic center ...

  8. The Ambassadors (Holbein) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ambassadors_(Holbein)

    The Ambassadors is a 1533 painting by Hans Holbein the Younger . Also known as Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve, [ 1] after the two people it portrays, it was created in the Tudor period, in the same year Elizabeth I was born. Franny Moyle speculates that Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn, then Queen of England, might have commissioned it ...

  9. Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_of_Monuments_at...

    The structural (free-standing) temples at Mamallapuram have been built with cut stones as building blocks, rather than carved into a rock (cave temples) or out of a rock (ratha temples). Surviving examples, fewer in number and representing a different stage, style and sophistication than the other monuments, are some of best examples of early ...