I have long been a fan of ancient art. I love the textures, the forms, the depth of history. I am sharing here a brief visual tour of a few examples, along with recent work inspired by these and other ancient forms...
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"DOGU", discovered in remains of Aomori. Jomon-era. BC.3,500 - BC.2,500. Aomori Japan. |
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Female-effigy ceramic burial urn, Northern Andes, Columbia,
South America, 1,000–1,500 AD. 23 x 40" in circumference |
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Predating Stonehenge by 6,000 years, Turkey’s stunning Gobekli Tepe
upends the conventional view of the rise of civilization. |
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12th- 9th centuries BC- Female Figure, possibly
from Las Bocas, in what will later be Mexico. |
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Neolithic Figure - 3500 BC |
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Ancient Yemeni goddess figurine. |
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Goddess Figure Pakistan (made) Date: circa 2nd century BCE (made) This particular piece
was recovered by Colonel D.H. Gordon from a site at Charsadda Shaikhan Dheri, Gandhara, Pakistan. |
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Female figurine (Psi-type), clay, Mycenaean, Late Helladic III B-C period 1300-1150 BC |
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Photos taken by Linda Landig in a museum in Oaxaca. They were all discovered in the
tombs in Monte Alban. Monte Alban is located on a leveled out mountain top
at 6,400' elevation. It was a Zapotec holy site. The burial city for the noble.
Originally contucted about 500 BC. |
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Photos taken by Linda Landig in a museum in Oaxaca.
More work from the Monte Alban site. |
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Photo by Niky Sayers of Egyptian faience beads at the British Museum. |
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Photo by Niky Sayers of Aztec carvings at the British Museum. |
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BC.3,500 - BC.2,500. Japanese ceramic figurine "DOGU".
Jomon period. Excavation place / Nagano Japan. |
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Female Figure / 300 BCE-400 CE / Mexico, Mesoamerica, Michoacan /
Chupicuaro Culture / Ceramic, pigment / The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC. |
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Cradle of Civilization Goddess Hattusa (Ḫa-at-tu-ša, read “Ḫattuša”)
was the capital of the Hittite Empire in the late Bronze Age. |
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Deep Vessel with Handles Middle Jōmon period (ca. 3500–2500 B.C.).
Japan (Source: The Metropolitan Museum) .
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Bird-Headed Figure Whistle, 8th–9th century Mexico, Veracruz Ceramic. |
Recent work by me and a couple of my Art Jewelry Elements fellow bloggers, inspired by ancient art:
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Goddess figures by Jenny Davis-Reazor |
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Goddess figures by Jenny Davis-Reazor |
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Goddess figures by Jenny Davis-Reazor |
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Goddess figure in a jewelry piece by Jenny Davis-Reazor |
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Amulets by Diana Ptaszynski |
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Amulets by Diana Ptaszynski |
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Bird forms by me (Karen Totten) |
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Goddess forms and other beads by me (Karen Totten) |
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Goddess form by me (Karen Totten) |
I hope you enjoyed this little survey. :)
Karen Totten
Starry Road Studio
I love your goddess form! Interesting article and great photos. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you Kathy!
DeleteFascinating post, Karen! I especially like the Goddess Hattusa. Its almost contemporary looking - such clean lines!
ReplyDeleteThanks Linda, I love that one too! I also love the Japanese DOGU.
DeleteGreat post! I loved seeing the contemporary art inspired by the ancient art. All very beautiful!
ReplyDeleteYes! I am always thrilled to share excitement and inspiration... nice to know Im not the only one, you know! Great reference post. I admit I was quizzing myself, trying to identify culture or region before reading the picture captions. Im such an art history geek.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jennifer - I am an art history geek too!
DeleteThese are wonderful! I love the goddess pieces! You have captured the look and texture of ancient pieces.
ReplyDelete