1. During what Greek style did Greeks begin to carve monumental works of Art? Why? What other cultures influential them to do so?
A. In the course of the Greek trade, the colony of Naukratis, Egypt introduced the Greeks to the colossal stone construction. Also, they were being exposed to Eastern artwork during the Orientalizing period and following the archaic period. The Greeks started to create the stone statues very similar and even duplicated to the way the Egyptians designed their monuments. The statue of Venus was designed and created from a Greek sculptor, this being one of the first sculpture that was duplicated like the Egyptians sculptured their statue art.
B. The statuary designs were changing from the Geometric times that were
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During the Archaic period, the Greeks started to expand their travels to the Near East and Egypt. Being exposed to the different art and styles, they took it back with them and started to use different materials for the statues.
2. In what ways do the Archaic Greek sculptures resemble the work of the Egyptians?
In the early Archaic period, the Greek sculptures were very similar to the Geometric art period. As the Greeks are being exposed to other art, they started to make their statuary look more like a real human beings instead of the gods with no facial structure. During the New York Kouros, the Kroisos, from Anavysos, Greece, statue is a good example of how the statue of a young male, posing in a natural stance. With closed hollow eyes, no expression on his face. His body is not exaggerated with bulging muscles, appearing like a young male man.
3. What do the terms of kouros and kore mean?
Both imitating the Egyptian statues stance. Kouros is a standing nude male in a free upright statue. Kore is a standing draped female statue with her body covered from her shoulders to toes, in a free upright statue. They were used for religious meaning, and used in sanctuaries, and mainly for tomb indicators, and mostly for the remembrance of the