119
HOMER The Illiad and The Odyssey 7th century B.C.

Greek lecture2.ppt

  • Upload
    rstrand

  • View
    372

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Greek lecture2.ppt

HOMER The Illiad

and The Odyssey 7th century

B.C.

Page 2: Greek lecture2.ppt

What was needed to create theater in Greece:

A middle class to create/attend the plays. A sense of partiotism. Spare time. Relative peace and relative prosperity. A stable economy. A public sponsor and public encouragement. Appreciation for learning.

Page 3: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 4: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 5: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 6: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 7: Greek lecture2.ppt

PISISTRATUS – 560 BCE to 510 BCE

Page 8: Greek lecture2.ppt

PERSIAN EMPIRE IN 5TH CENTURY B.C.E.

Page 9: Greek lecture2.ppt

Greece,

Circa 500 B.C.E.

Page 10: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 11: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 12: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 13: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 14: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 15: Greek lecture2.ppt

PERICLES 495 B.C.E. to 429 B.C.E. Ruled from 460 B.C.E. to 429 B.C.E.

'All kinds of enterprises should be created which will provide an inspiration for every art, find employment for every hand... we must devote ourselves to acquiring things that will be the source of everlasting fame.'

Page 16: Greek lecture2.ppt

Parthenon at the Acropolis paid for, in part, by the Delian League

Page 17: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 18: Greek lecture2.ppt

ATHENA AND NIKE

Nashville, Tennessee

Page 19: Greek lecture2.ppt

NASHVILLE RECREATION

Page 20: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 21: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 22: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 23: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 24: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 25: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 26: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 27: Greek lecture2.ppt

ARCHAIC 6th Century BC

Page 28: Greek lecture2.ppt

SEVERE Early 5th Century BC

Page 29: Greek lecture2.ppt

CLASSICAL Mid 5th Century BC

Page 30: Greek lecture2.ppt

HELLENISTIC 4th Century BC

Page 31: Greek lecture2.ppt

CONJECTURAL MASK OF DIONYSUS

Page 32: Greek lecture2.ppt

DIONYSUS

Page 33: Greek lecture2.ppt

DIONYSUS Statue made 4th

Century B.C.E.— Roman copy of Greek original.

Page 34: Greek lecture2.ppt

Modern Production at Epidaurus

Page 35: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 36: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 37: Greek lecture2.ppt

MASKS OF TRAGEDY POSSIBLY CAST FROM MASKS WORN BY GREEK ACTORS.

Page 38: Greek lecture2.ppt

STRUCTURAL CONCEITS OF GREEK TRAGEDY

•! Prologue (exposition) •! Parados (entrance of the chorus) •! Episode (two person scene) •! Staisma (comment on the episode)

–!Episode and Staisma continue. •! Exodos (resolution and exit)

Page 39: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 40: Greek lecture2.ppt

Inciting Incident

Point of Attack

Rising Action

Climax

Falling Action

Resolution

Page 41: Greek lecture2.ppt

GENRES INVENTED BY THE GREEKS

•! TRAGEDY –! Character based, ends with the death or destruction

of a single main character. Based on mythology. •! SATYR

–! Plot based, bawdy parody of serious stories from mythology.

•! OLD COMEDY –! Character based critiques of the social norms. New

story ideas. •! NEW COMEDY

–! Plot based, formulaic plays about young lovers being kept apart by their parents – aka domestic comedies.

Page 42: Greek lecture2.ppt

THE POETICS BY ARISTOTLE

•! Written after the fact (circa 330 B.C.E.) •! Praises Sophocles over Euripides •! Three Unities

–!Space –!Time –!Action

•! One character – single action •! No subplots

Page 43: Greek lecture2.ppt

Satyr – modern depiction

Page 44: Greek lecture2.ppt

SATYR MASK

Page 45: Greek lecture2.ppt

Vase Painting of A Satyr Play.

Page 46: Greek lecture2.ppt

THE GREAT GREEK PLAYWRIGHTS

•! Aescylus (523 to 456 BC) Tragedy and Satyr •! Sophocles (490 – 406 BC) Tragedy and Satyr •! Euripides (480 – 406 BC) Tradedy and Satyr •! Aristophanes (445 to 385 BC) Old Comedy •! Menander (342 – 292 BC) New Comedy

Page 47: Greek lecture2.ppt

AESCHYLUS 523 B.C.E. to

456 B.C.E.

Page 48: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 49: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 50: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 51: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 52: Greek lecture2.ppt

Orestes kills Aegisthus, Clytemnestra flees

Page 53: Greek lecture2.ppt

Apollo cleanses Orestes with pig’s blood.

Page 54: Greek lecture2.ppt

Clytemnestra tries to awaken furies.

Page 55: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 56: Greek lecture2.ppt

Modern production of The Oresteia

Page 57: Greek lecture2.ppt

Oresteia at Thick Description, San Jose

Page 58: Greek lecture2.ppt

SOPHOCLES 496 B.C.E to 406 B.C.E.

Page 59: Greek lecture2.ppt

Oedipus Rex

Page 60: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 61: Greek lecture2.ppt

Contemporary production of Oedipus Rex

TYRONE GUTHRIE OEDIPUS REX

Page 62: Greek lecture2.ppt

Jocasta

Page 63: Greek lecture2.ppt

Expressionistic production of Oedipus Rex

Page 64: Greek lecture2.ppt

Euripides 480 BC to 406 BC

Page 65: Greek lecture2.ppt

Medea with two doomed children. Roman copy, 2nd

Century C.E.

Page 66: Greek lecture2.ppt

Media’s chariot

Page 67: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 68: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 69: Greek lecture2.ppt

Jason and Medea

Page 70: Greek lecture2.ppt

JASON AND MEDEA AUSTRALIAN PRODUCTION

Page 71: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 72: Greek lecture2.ppt

MEDEA AT ANTIOCH

Page 73: Greek lecture2.ppt

ARISTOPHANES 445 B.C.E. – 385 B.C.E.

Page 74: Greek lecture2.ppt

Vase Painting, possibly of THE BIRDS

Page 75: Greek lecture2.ppt

Possible depiction of THE BIRDS

Page 76: Greek lecture2.ppt

Comedy Mask of Old Man

Page 77: Greek lecture2.ppt

MASKS OF COMEDY

Page 78: Greek lecture2.ppt

Modern set design for The Birds

Page 79: Greek lecture2.ppt

Modern mask and costume for The Birds

Page 80: Greek lecture2.ppt

LYSISTRATA at Mt. SAC

Page 81: Greek lecture2.ppt

MENANDER 342 B.C.E to 292 B.C.E.

Page 82: Greek lecture2.ppt

Menander and masks

Menander with masks

Page 83: Greek lecture2.ppt

Differences between Old and New Comedy

•! OLD COMEDY –! New stories based on

pursuit of a “Happy Idea”

–! Political in nature –! Episodic –! Chorus is integral –! Mystical and varied

settings (likely on the orchestra)

–! Crass and sexual –! High verse

•! NEW COMEDY –! Formulaic stories based on

love interest and flawed character

–! Domestic in nature –! Five acts –! Chorus is incidental –! Street setting, likely on the

skena, with three doorways.

–! Polite –! Pedestrian dialogue

Page 84: Greek lecture2.ppt

Greek Architecture and Stagecraft

Page 85: Greek lecture2.ppt

Greek Theater, plan view

Page 86: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 87: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 88: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 89: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 90: Greek lecture2.ppt

Deus ex Machina or Mechane:

conjectural drawing

Page 91: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 92: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 93: Greek lecture2.ppt

Deus ex Machina Conjectural drawing

Page 94: Greek lecture2.ppt

Ekkeklema

Page 95: Greek lecture2.ppt

TWO MODERN CONJECTURES FOR THE EKKYKLEMA

Page 96: Greek lecture2.ppt

PINAKES

Page 97: Greek lecture2.ppt

Periaktoi

Page 98: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 99: Greek lecture2.ppt

This Roman statue may depict a Greek tragic actor. There is scant evidence that Kothurnae were worn in 5th Century B.C.E., but possibly they were used in 4th Century B.C.E.

Page 100: Greek lecture2.ppt

Modern Depictions of Cothurnae

Page 101: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 102: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 103: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 104: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 105: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 106: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 107: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 108: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 109: Greek lecture2.ppt

Oedipus Rex

Page 110: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 111: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 112: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 113: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 114: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 115: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 116: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 117: Greek lecture2.ppt

Contemporary production of Oedipus Rex

TYRONE GUTHRIE OEDIPUS REX

Page 118: Greek lecture2.ppt
Page 119: Greek lecture2.ppt