Journal of Hellenic
Studies
, 96, 1946, p. 115 and in
Bulletin de
Correspondences Helléniques,
71–72, 1947–
1948, p. 440 with photo. Weinberg 1951, no.
7, p. 124; See Zachos 1990, p. 34 and fig. p.
33; Zachos 1990 and Zachos 1996 (both with
photo). Weinberg 1976, no. 21, p. 59.
14
Getz-Preziosi 1990a, no. 2, p. 6 (with
previous bibliography). The piece appears as
Weinberg 1951, no. 4, p. 123 and Weinberg
1976, no. 29, p. 60.
15
Getz-Preziosi 1990b, no. 8a, pp. 13–15 with
previous bibliography (alleged provenance
is Euboea or the east coast of Attica
opposite, near Porto Raphti). In Thimme
1976, under catalogue no. 4, it is mentioned
as belonging to a Swiss private collection.
This piece does not appear in Weinberg
1976.
16
Although the shape of the upper arm is
not so clear on the front of Shelby White no.
2, it stands out from the back.
17
For a much wider comparison of Neolithic
figurines, see Weinberg 1951, pp. 124–133;
Weinberg 1976, pp. 54–58.
18
The Saliagos “Fat Lady” was found during
excavations, but in a square beyond the built
structures without any significant information
regarding its context of use.
19
On these questions, see Marangou 1996a.
For an overview of Neolithic sites and
artefacts from the Cyclades, Renfrew 1972,
pp. 507–509; for a brief presentation of the
Neolithic culture in the Greek world, Lichter
2011, pp. 32–40 with bibliography.
References:
Hogarth 1927, pp. 56, 59–60 and
fig. VIIa, IXc.; Verhoogen 1930; Weinberg
1951, p. 123, no. 5.; Renfrew 1972, p. 509;
Weinberg 1976, p. 58 and list no. 19, p. 59;
Thimme 1976, cat. 2, p. 419 and p. 210, fig.
2; Getz-Gentle 2011, p. 13, fig. 3.
107
106
10
Standing SteatopygouS
figure
Cyclades
Neolithic period
(late V millennium BC)
Shell, H. 5.7 cm, W. 3.3 cm
Private Collection, UK
Bibliography:
Thimme 1977, no. 9;
Getz-Gentle 2011, no. 2.
Carved from the central axis of
a conical sea shell, this exquisite
apparition is a perfect example of
the standing female figure made
in small numbers throughout the
Aegean in the fifth millennium, with
exaggerated buttocks and thighs,
unusually broad shoulders, forearms
carved on the body in a symmetrical,
opposed arrangement. Typical are
the elongated head and the small
rudimentary feet separated by an
inverted V shape space. Constructed
from carefully balanced geometric
volumes, this tiny figure achieves
a forceful monumentality. Parallel
examples were found at Egina.
C.A.
11
violin figure
Cyclades
Early Cycladic I period (3300–2700 BC)
Marble, H. 11 cm
Private Foundation, UK
Bibliography:
Thimme 1977, no. 48.
109
12
violin figure
Cyclades
Early Cycladic I period (3300–2700 BC)
Marble, H. 23 cm, W. 10 cm
Private Collection, Paris
Bibliography:
Getz-Gentle 2011, no. 9.
The simplified flat figures with long
stalk head-neck and body shaped
in a figure of eight, called
violin
,
were made in great numbers in the
beginning of the early Bronze Age of
the Cyclades. Violin figures are rarely
decorated, but this is an exception: a V
is incised at the neckline and another,
inverted and larger, on the lower part
indicates the sexual triangle, complete
with a discreet slot. These abstract
figures were introduced at the same
time as a new, elaborated type called
Plastiras, a svelte form that retains
some of the realistic rendition of the
Neolithic figures, but elongated.
C.A.
13
violin figure
Cyclades
Early Cycladic I period (3300–2700 BC)
Marble, H. 13.8 cm, W. 4.6 cm
Ligabue Collection, Venice
Bibliography:
Thimme 1977, pp. 226,
431, no. 43.
A dynamic example, remarkable for
the angular figure-of-eight body
and elongated neck and waist. The
head and neck are schematized and
blended together in a single long
stalk, similar to the stalk of a number
or figures from the Beycesultan type:
this is an indication of the relationship
between the island and western
Anatolia. The two sides are almost
identical, but not quite, one side,
probably the back, is slightly flatter
than the other (the front?) with a faint
swelling at the height of the hips and
breasts. Other violin figures shown
here are unambiguously sexed and
oriented as to front and back, while
comparable violin-shaped types from
Beycesultan and Kusura in western
Anatolia tend to have identical,
un-oriented back and front. This
difference may reside in different
functions of the figure during their life
before deposition.
C.A.
111
110
14
pregnant reclining figure
Early Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 19.6 cm, W. 6 cm
Private Collection, UK
Bibliography:
Getz-Gentle 2011,
no. 27.
15
reclining figure
Early Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 19.9 cm
Private Collection, UK (courtesy
RWAA)
Bibliography:
Thimme 1977, no. 144.
16
pregnant reclining figure
Late Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 20.3 cm
Private Collection, London
Bibliography:
Getz-Gentle 2011, no.
41.
Like no. 14, this figure is
unambiguously pregnant, but the
belly is more compressed. The very
elongated neck, the sloping shoulders,
the concave contour of the thighs
and ankles give this figure its inspired
and dynamic balance. The straighter
profile of the legs and the absence of
perforation are characteristic of the
Late Spedos style.
C.A.
113
112
17
pregnant reclining figure
Late Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 37.2 cm, W. 8.5 cm
Private Collection, Paris
18
reclining feMale figure
Late Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 47 cm
Private Collection, Germany
Bibliography:
Getz-Gentle 2011,
no. 42.
This figure is remarkable for the
numerous painted marks, possibly
indicative of tattoos: the cross on
the chest is so far without parallel.
More frequent are the paler marks
on the face and arms: three vertical
above the neck, three on the right
cheek, possibly another series along
the forehead, and pale traces on the
forearm. The contrasted proportions
of the large head and compressed
torso, the shortened ankles and
elongated feet are distinctively
personal, encouraging Pat Gentle to
reconstruct the work of an individual
master, the Sutton Place Sculptor,
around this masterpiece.
C.A.
115
114
19
Head of reclining feMale
figure
Late Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 14.8 cm, W. 9 cm
Private Collection, Paris
Softly round cheeks, general contour
in the shape of a capital U. Note the
veining of the marble: the sculptor
took advantage of the natural veining
on the upper part of the head to
suggest the presence of large,
drooping eyes.
C.A.
20
Head of reclining feMale
figure
Late Spedos type
Cyclades
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 11.5 cm, W. 6.5 cm
Private Collection, Paris
A graceful face, the softly round cheeks,
the for
ehead slightly flaring in a lyre
shape and the gently curved profile
contrast with the straight nose. Very
faint traces of large, drooping eyes.
C.A.
117
116
21
Harp player cycladeS
Thera
Early Cycladic II period (2700–2300 BC)
Marble, H. 16.8 cm, W. 5.5 cm
Badisches Landesmuseum, Karlsruhe,
inv. 864
Bibliography:
Buchholz &
Karageorghis 1973, no. 1210; Thimme
1976, p. 492, no. 255; Thimme 1977, p.
496, no. 255; Rehme 1997, p. 84, K 13,
fig. 9 left.
At the time Friedrich Maler acquired
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