Ancient - Phoenicia



Movement: Ancient - Phoenicia
Dates: c. 2500 b.c. - 359 b.c.
Phoenician

Phoenician art lacks unique characteristics that might distinguish it from its contemporaries. This is due to its being highly influenced by foreign artistic cultures: primarily Egypt, Greece and Assyria. Phoenicians who were taught on the banks of the Nile and the Euphrates gained a wide artistic experience and finally came to create their own art, which was an amalgam of foreign models and perspectives. In an article from The New York Times published on January 5, 1879, Phoenician art was described by the following:

He entered into other men's labors and made most of his heritage. The Sphinx of Egypt became Asiatic, and its new form was transplanted to Nineveh on the one side and to Greece on the other. The rosettes and other patterns of the Babylonian cylinders were introduced into the handiwork of Phoenicia, and so passed on to the West, while the hero of the ancient Chaldean epic became first the Tyrian Melkarth, and then the Herakles of Hellas.

External links

  • "Art: The history of ideas in literature and the arts in aesthetic theory and literary criticism" The Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Art History resources
  • Ars Summum Project

Timelines

  • Timeline of Art History from Metropolitan Museum of Art

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