Kouros

Kouros

A kouros (plural kouroi) is a representation of a male youth, especially those dating from the Archaic period in Greece (about 650 BC to about 500 BC) and especially plastic (artistic sense), notably free-standing Greek sculpture in stone (typically marble).

The English word is a loan from Ancient Greek Polytonic|κοῦρος, the Ionic dialect form of general Greek κόρος, "male youth." Compare "ephebos". Koros was a common word used millions of times in all substantial ancient Greek literature. [cite web|first=Henry George|last=Liddell|authorlink=Henry George Liddell|coauthors=Robert Scott|title=Greek-English Lexicon: koros|publisher=Tufts University: The Perseus Project|url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0057%3Aentry%3D%2359152] Homer, writing the first known literature, uses the Ionic form. The word is from the extended o-grade of the Indo-European language root *kor-wo- (e-grade *ker-), "grow". [cite web|first=Calvert|last=Watkins|authorlink=Calvert Watkins|title=The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition: Appendix I: Indo-European Roots: *ker-2|date=2000|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Company|url=http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE223.html]

Earlier free-standing plastic representations of humans were made of wood (see "xoanon"), but by the seventh century B.C. the Greeks had learned from the Egyptians the art of carving stone with iron tools, and were making "kouroi" from stone, particularly marble from the islands of Paros and Samos. Modern art historians have used the word to refer to this specific type of male nude statue since the 1890s. Kouroi were also commonly known as "Apollos," since it was assumed that all kouroi depicted the ideally youthful Apollo.

Their female counterparts in sculpture are the "korai". In addition are a smaller number of seated pairs. Also representations of mythical beasts of the period may evidence the archaic features of the statuary.

Cultural origin and evolution

According to Herodotus, ["Histories", Book II, Chapter 1, Section 54.] Psammetichus I (664-610 BC) invited Ionians and Carians to settle in lands provided for them along the Nile and these were the first foreigners to settle in Egypt. It is no coincidence that large marble sculptures began to replace the smaller "xoana" in Greek temples at about 650. [Richter, pages 48-49.] The initial "kouroi" were created at a time when Greece was under the cultural influence of Egypt. Some features apparently taken from Egyptian sculpture are:
* Frontal pose with no torsion of the body. Head erect, eyes front, face flat, head square, waist narrow, muscles squarish and poorly delineated.
*Left foot advanced with no corresponding hip displacement. This characteristically rigid frontal striding pose is reminiscent of statues of Egyptian pharaohs.
*Arms hanging straight at sides fingers curved, thumb foremost, although a few show one arm extended forward from the elbow, holding an offering.
*A faint smile (the "archaic smile") on their lips. Some differences are:
*Egyptian statues are supported by a pillar behind; Greek are free-standing.
*Egyptian males have a loin cloth; "kouroi" are always naked.

Purpose

At the end of the sixth century BC, "kouroi" begin to show more relaxed poses and their hair styles become more typical of mainland Greece. By the seventh century, the earliest period for which full-size sculptures exist in this culture, "kouroi" had come to serve two purposes. They were presented to temples as votive offerings by prominent Greeks, as is shown by the inscriptions which frequently appear on their plinths. They also were placed in cemeteries to mark the graves of prominent citizens. In cemeteries, "kouroi" showed the deceased as the Greek ideal of masculinity. In very early times, it is likely that "kouroi" were thought to possess magical properties, and to be inhabited by the "daimon" of the gods.

"Kouroi", however, were never intended to be representations of individuals. One of the best known "kouroi" is the grave-marker of Kroisos, an Athenian soldier. The inscription on his statue reads: "Stop and show pity beside the marker of Kroisos, dead, whom once in battle's front rank raging Ares destroyed." The word "marker" ("sema") tells us that this is a "symbolic" representation of Kroisos, not a portrait.

A well-known example is the double kouros of Kleobis and Biton, found at Delphi. These statues date from about 580 BC and are representations of two legendary heroes of Argos in the Peloponnese. Although an inscription identifies them as Kleobis and Biton, they are typical "kouroi", embodying the Archaic Peloponnesian virtues of filial piety and physical strength rather than specific persons. Another well-known archaic "kouros" is the sixth-century Kouros of Melos, which retains archaic frontality in the standardised pose.

The Kritios Boy, a "kouros" attributed to Kritios from about 490-80 BC (Acropolis Museum, Athens), exemplifies the change from Archaic to Classical sculpture at the time of the First Greco-Persian War; his realistic proportions and details are based on visual experience rather than the schematic ideals of the preceding generation, or mathematically derived ideals, such as the Polyclitean canon established by Polyclitus.

Early archaic period 660-580 BC

Middle archaic period 580-535 BC

In the sixth century "kouroi" grew larger as the Greeks became richer and more confident with marble sculpture. Some were three or even four times life-size. Some of the largest were made for the Heraion of Samos, a great sanctuary of the goddess Hera on Samos, which was lavishly endowed by the tyrant Polycrates. One of these giant "kouroi", at five metres tall, the largest ever found, was unearthed in 1981 and is now in the Samos Archeological Museum, which had to be rebuilt to accommodate it. An inscription on its left thigh tells us that the statue was dedicated to Hera by an Ionian nobleman called Isches.

Late archaic period 540-480 BC

By the end of the sixth century, the "kouroi" were giving way to naturalistic sculptures of living people. Among the earlier representations of specific people are the statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton, erected in Athens in about 500 BC. These figures (see the illustration at the Harmodius and Aristogeiton article) still show some of the formality of the "kouros" tradition, but are generally more lifelike. It is significant that these statues were a memorial to the establishment of Athenian democracy. They thus represent the replacement of both the "kouros" and the system of aristocratic rule which it represented..

Notes

Bibliography

*

ee also

* Greek art
* Strangford Apollo
* Biton and Kleobis
* National Archaeological Museum of Athens
* List of museums in Greece

External links

* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/schumata/tags/kouros/ Kouros Photographs]
* [http://hellas.teipir.gr/Thesis/Samos/english/tdk158.html Samos Archaeological Museum]
* [http://www.getty.edu/art/collections/objects/o12908.html Uncertain Provenance: The Getty Kouros]
* [http://www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/viewOne.asp?dep=13&item=32.11.1 Marble statue of a kouros (youth)] at the [http://www.metmuseum.org Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC]

Gallery


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • kouros — [ kuros ] n. m. • 1934; couros 1930; mot gr. « jeune garçon » ♦ Arts Statue grecque archaïque représentant un jeune homme (cf. Korê). Des kouros. ● kouros, kouroi ou couros nom masculin (grec kouros, jeune homme) Statue de jeune homme nu, debout …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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  • kouros — CÚ / s. n. statuie antică grecească reprezentând un tânăr atlet nud, în poziţie frontală, cu braţele întinse pe lângă corp şi cu un picior puţin scos înainte. (< fr., gr. kouros) Trimis de raduborza, 15.09.2007. Sursa: MDN …   Dicționar Român

  • kouros — [ko͞o′rō̂s] n. pl. kouroi [ko͞o′roi] [Gr] a statue of a nude male youth in a standing position, from the archaic period of Greek art (620 500 B.C. ) …   English World dictionary

  • Kouros — Münchner Kouros, Glyptothek (München) Ein Kouros (auch: Kuros; Plural Kouroi) ist in der griechischen Kunst der Archaik die Statue eines jungen Mannes, das männliche Pendant zur Kore. Während die Kore in der Regel mit einem …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Kouros — Tête d’un kouros au musée national archéologique d Athènes. Un kouros (pluriel kouroï[1]) est la statue d un jeune homme, datant de la période archaïque de la sculpture grecque (de 650 à 500) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • kouros — /koor os/, n., pl. kouroi /koor oy/. Gk. Antiq. a sculptured representation of a young man, esp. one produced prior to the 5th century B.C. [1915 20; < Gk koûros, dial. var. of KÓROS boy; cf. KORE] * * * Archaic Greek statue representing a… …   Universalium

  • kouros — noun (plural kouroi) Etymology: Greek kouros, koros boy more at crescent Date: 1920 an ancient Greek statue of a nude male youth standing with the left leg forward and arms at the sides …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • kouros — noun /ˈkuːɹɒs/ a sculpture of a naked youth in Ancient Greece, the male equivalent of a kore. , 1974: A redstone kouros from Sounion, this strapping young Amsterdammer, translated into the slenderer grace of the modern graminivore. Guy Davenport …   Wiktionary

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