Classical Greek sculpture is simple, balanced, and restrained. The expression of a figure is genrally solemn. The aesthetic principle in classical Greek sculpture was one of refinement, balance, and simplicity.
There is no great difference in ideas and ideals. Very important for the Romans, though, was likeness. Greek sculpture endeavoured to be ideally beautiful.
Michelangelo admired the sculpture technique of the Ancient Greeks. While he was working in Rome, he would often spend time admiring and looking at a sculpture called "Laocoön and His Sons". He thought it was genial. If you pull up an image of this sculpture you'll see why, it really is marvelous.
Grekk sculptors sought perfect beauty. Romans wanted a perfect likeness.
Sculpture of the human body
Greek sculpture was colored, as was most sculpture till the Renaissance, and indeed if the ancient marble statues which were found and admired at that time had kept their paint, the more conservative of us would probably still expect coloring on.
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Greek sculpture influenced the Romans from the 2nd century BC. Prominent 1st century BC and 1st century AD Romans such as Cicero and Pliny the Elder greatly admired the innovative work of classical Greek sculpture artists, such as Polykleitos. However, the Romans did not produce much sculpture based on the classical Greek model. Their sculpture was predominantly portraiture (see below) until , from the 1st century AD, the Romans adopted Hellenistic sculpture, which took sculpture to a different level, as a model for their own sculpture. Prior to the influence of Greek sculpture, Roman sculpture was portraiture sculpture (busts). Their portraiture sculpture is regarded as the best sculpture of this kind ever produced.
Edmund von Mach has written: 'Greek sculpture' -- subject(s): Greek Sculpture 'Germany's point of view' -- subject(s): World War, 1914-1918 'A handbook of Greek and Roman sculpture' -- subject(s): Roman Sculpture, Greek Sculpture 'Greek sculpture, its spirit and principles' -- subject(s): Greek Sculpture
Carl Bluemel has written: 'Greek sculptors at work' -- subject(s): Greek Sculpture, Sculpture grecque 'Greek sculptors at work' -- subject(s): Greek Sculpture, Sculptors, Sculpture, Technique
Luciano Laurenzi has written: 'Ritratti greci' -- subject(s): Greek Portrait sculpture, Greek Portraits, Greek Sculpture, Portrait sculpture
Because just bye looking at them they tell alot of history and can tell alot of informaton
Karl Schefold has written: 'Die Bildnisse der antiken Dichter, Redner und Denker' -- subject(s): Greek Portrait sculpture, Greek Sculpture, Portrait sculpture, Greek, Portrait sculpture, Roman, Roman Portrait sculpture, Roman Sculpture, Sculpture, Greek, Sculpture, Roman 'Meisterwerke griechischer Kunst' -- subject(s): Art, Greek, Greek Art 'Die Griechen und ihre Nachbarn' -- subject(s): Ancient Art, Art, Ancient, Art, Greco-Roman, Art, Greek, Greek Art 'Gods and heroes in late archaic Greek art' -- subject(s): Art, Greek, Gods in art, Greek Art, Mythology, Greek, in art 'Kertscher Vasen' -- subject(s): Greek Vases, Vase-painting, Greek, Vases, Greek 'The art of classical Greece' -- subject(s): Art, Greek, Greek Art
Ulrich Hausmann has written: 'Griechische Weihreliefs' -- subject(s): Greek Sculpture, Relief (Sculpture), Sculpture, Greek, Votive offerings
Spyros Meletzees has written: 'National Museum of Archaeology, Athens' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Greek Sculpture, Sculpture, Sculpture, Greek
Ruurd B. Halbertsma has written: 'Beeldhouwkunst uit Hellas en Rome' -- subject- s -: Classical Sculpture, Greek Sculpture, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden te Leiden, Roman Sculpture, Sculpture, Sculpture, Classical, Sculpture, Greek, Sculpture, Roman
Frederick R. Grace has written: 'Archaic sculpture in Boeotia' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Greek Sculpture, Terra-cotta sculpture, Terra-cotta sculpture, Greek