Tanagra figurine
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The mold-cast terracotta Tanagra figurines, produced from the later fourth century BCE, were a specialty of the Boeotian town of Tanagra in Greece. They were coated with a liquid white slip before firing and were sometimes painted afterwards in naturalistic tints with watercolors, such as the famous "Dame en Bleu" ("Lady in Blue") at the Louvre (illustration). Scientists wonder why a rural place like Tanagra has produced such fine and rather "urban" style terracotta figures.
Tanagra figures depict real women — and some men and boys — in everyday costume, with familiar accessories like hats, wreaths or fans. Some character pieces[1] may have represented stock figures from the New Comedy of Menander and other writers. Others continued an earlier tradition of molded terracotta figures used as cult images or votive objects. Typically they are about 4 to 8 inches high.
The coraplasters, or sculptors of the models that provided the molds, delighted in revealing the body under the folds of a himation thrown round the shoulders like a cloak and covering the head, over a chiton, and the movements of such drapery in action.
[edit] Discovery
Tanagra figures had not been much noted before the end of the 1860s, when ploughmen of Vratsi in Boeotia, Greece, began to uncover tombs ranging in date over many centuries. The main finds especially from the 4th and 3rd centuries BCE were secured in 1874. Inside and outside the tombs of the Hellenistic period — 3rd to 1st centuries BCE — were many small terracotta figures. Great quantities that were found in excavation sites at Tanagra identified the city as the source of these figures, which were also exported to distant markets. In addition, such figures were made in many other Mediterranean sites, including Alexandria, Tarentum in Magna Graecia, Centuripe in Sicily and Myrina in Mysia.
The figures appealed to 19th century middle-class ideals of realism, and "Tanagra figures" entered the visual repertory of Europeans. Jean-Léon Gérôme created a polychromatic sculpture depicting the spirit of Tanagra,[2] and one French critic described the fashionable women portrayed in the statuettes as "the parisienne of the ancient world".[3] One of the characters in Oscar Wilde's play An Ideal Husband (1895), says of the character of Mabel Chiltern that "she is really like a Tanagra statuette, and would be rather annoyed if she were told so." Under the pressure of collectors' demands, Tanagra terracottas began to be faked.[4]
[edit] Notes
- ^ The head and torso of an actor in comedy wearing a grotesquely grinning satyr's mask is at the Musée du Louvre.
- ^ Jean-Léon Gérôme, Working in Marble, or The Artist Sculpting Tanagra, 1890
- ^ Dahesh Museum, Gérôme's Tanagra, 2001.
- ^ Zink and Porto 2005 report that 20 percent of the Tanagra terracottas in the British Museum have been identified as fakes.
[edit] References
- Besques-Mollard, Simone, 1950. Tanagra (Paris: Braun)
- Tanagra - Myth and Archaeology Exhibition, Paris, 2003; Montreal, 2004.
[edit] External links
- A charming figurine with well-preserved coat of paint (Hermitage Museum)
- A Closer Look at the Tanagra figurine called the Titeux Dancer (Louvre museum)
- (Metropolitan Museum) Tanagra figurines
- Persephone with the pomegranate, Tanagra figurine with traces of white slip (Louvre)
- (Louvre) Several Tanagra figures
- Antoine Zink and Elisa Porto, "Luminescence dating of the Tanagra terracottas of the Louvre collection", 2005. (pdf file)
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