101
100
the late Spedos figure can be very large, with a lyre-shaped head, broad sloping
shoulders, the leg-cleft unpierced and the profile view quite straight. the Goulandris
Sculptor stands out as the most prolific, over a long career; more than a hundred
complete works and fragments have been identified. his creations epitomize the calm
restraint and harmony of proportions that one associates with cycladic sculpture.
With the dokathismata and its further development, the chalandriani variety, the
straight profile continues, the front and back tend to
be flat, with abrupt bulges for
breasts, belly, knees and buttocks. the outline contours of the legs are angular, the
leg cleft shallow. there is a greater emphasis on the upper torso and the position of
the arms, which had remained constant for so long, now can vary. the head often
assumes a shield shape. the severity of the dokathismata figure is relieved by an
elegant rendering of the forearms and the bold audacity of the stylized forms (
cat. n°
22-23
). Around 2300–2200 BC, representations of an armed male are introduced. the
hunter-warrior wearing a baldric, a belt and a penis sheath suggests the presence
of a threat to the islanders. it may therefore be no coincidence that the art of mar-
ble-carving, which had flourished over six hundred years, then came to an abrupt
end. significantly, the revival of the art, during the late seventh century BC, the greek
Archaic period, originated on the same marble rich islands.
the function(s) of Cycladic figures cannot be identified with certainty, but evidence
for their repair and abundant remains of polychromy makes clear that they were
actively used during the lives of their owners before they were placed in tombs. they
were brightly painted, notably with almond-shaped eyes and a mass of hair across
the forehead and down the back. red and blue seem to be symbolically important,
and repainting seems to have occurred repeatedly, of the eyes in particular. some of
the repainting may have taken place as part of women’s rituals. one might speculate
that the female image represented a protective maternal being with control over
such mysterious phenomena as birth, death, disease, the seasons, the bountiful yet
treacherous sea, the night sky alive with myriad stars, the rising and setting of the
sun. shamanistic rituals may have been performed on the occasion of events having
to do with puberty, marriage, conception, pregnancy, childbirth, illness and death.
there are female Cycladic figures shown as pregnant or with postpartum creases.
the folded arms may have been regarded as symbolically shielding the womb, in
addition to minimizing damage to the figure. in the tomb, the position with folded
arms would, finally, have been appropriate for funerary rites.
G-G.P.
violin figure
Cyclades
Early Cycladic I period (3300–2700 BC)
Ligabue Collection, Venice
(cat. 13)
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