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The Games in Ancient Athens: A Special Presentation to Celebrate the 2004 Olympics

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Panathenaic prize amphora, ca. 530 B.C. Attributed to the Euphiletos Painter. Greek, Attic. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Rogers Fund, 1914 (14.130.12).
More about this Exhibition
In honor of the modern Olympics that will take place in Athens this summer, The Metropolitan Museum of Art is displaying a special selection of ancient Greek vases, bronzes, and additional works showcasing aspects of the games that were held in Athens in antiquity. "The Games in Ancient Athens: A Special Presentation to Celebrate the 2004 Olympics" features some fifty works of art created between the sixth and the fourth century B.C. depicting chariot races, foot races, wrestling, and discus throwing, among other athletic activities. This presentation, which is drawn entirely from the Museum's extensive collection of Greek art, is located within the Mary and Michael Jaharis Gallery as well as in adjacent areas of the Greek Galleries, where examples of athletics in art are highlighted.


More about the Works on View

Educational Programs

Exhibition Organizers and Credits

More about the Works on View
Athletics were of major importance in the life of the ancient Greeks. The Olympic games, inaugurated in 776 B.C., were established at Olympia in the Peloponnesos. Held thereafter every four years in honor of the god Zeus, the Olympic games endured for more than one thousand years. By the sixth century B.C., panhellenic—from pan, or "all," and hellenikos, or "Greek"—games were held at Delphi, Nemea, Isthmia, and Olympia, and were called periodos or "circuit" games. Many local games, such as those at Athens, were modeled on these four.

The Greeks esteemed the human body as the most beautiful of forms and they tried, through exercise, to make their own bodies perfect. They felt that their love for athletics was something that distinguished them from barbarians, and only Greek citizens were allowed to compete in the games. For the ancient Greeks, whose fiercely independent city-states were often at war with one another, athletic contests became a unifying, peacemaking force. During the Olympic games, all hostilities were suspended. City-states sent their best athletes to compete. Victors brought honor to themselves, their families, and their hometowns, and were given public honors—statues were dedicated to them and victory poems were written to commemorate their feats.

"The Games in Ancient Athens" highlights the Panathenaic games, the most important games held at Athens in antiquity, which were considered sacred to the goddess Athena. Most prominent in the presentation are nine large Panathenaic prize amphorae, dating from the middle of the sixth century B.C. to the second quarter of the fourth century B.C. On one side of these impressive vases are illustrations of various competitions, including four-horse chariot races, sprinting and long-distance running events, and wrestling. On the other side, the goddess Athena is generally shown striding between two columns with the inscription "one of the prizes from Athens." On display is one of the earliest extant Panathenaic vases, signed by Nikias and made in the sixth century B.C. Another exceptionally well-preserved example from the fourth century B.C. still has its lid. It illustrates the development of the vase shape as well as the conservatism of the decoration, which retained the use of the black-figure technique long after red-figure had become the preferred method for painting Athenian vases. Each Panathenaic amphora was filled with some thirty-eight liters of olive oil harvested from the sacred olive groves of Athena. As many as one hundred and forty Panathenaic amphorae were awarded to the winners of the chariot races and lesser numbers for competitors who were victorious in other events.

Four outstanding bronze statuettes from various regions of the Greek world are also on view, depicting athletes in the midst of competition and at rest.

Related works that are currently on view in the Museum's Greek Galleries—including marble sculptures, Athenian black-figure and red-figure vases, and silver coins—remain in their usual settings. During the presentation of "The Games in Ancient Athens," they carry special labeling so that visitors can identify them easily in the galleries, as well as descriptive text with additional information on the theme of Greek athletics and the Panathenaic games.

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Educational Programs
The Metropolitan Museum has organized a full range of educational programs, including gallery talks and lectures, in conjunction with this exhibition. See the online calendar for a list of programs organized by date.

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Exhibition Organizers and Credits
The exhibition is organized by Seán Hemingway and Christopher S. Lightfoot, associate curators, under the direction of Carlos A. Picón, curator in charge, Department of Greek and Roman Art. Exhibition design is by Jeffrey L. Daly, chief designer; graphics are by Constance Norkin, graphic designer; and lighting is by Clint Ross Coller and Rich Lichte, lighting designers, all of the Museum's Design Department.

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