Сидящий арфист

2800–2700 BCE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 151
Эта работа является одним из первых немногих сохранившихся изображений музыкантов, относящихся к раннему бронзовому веку, созданным на Кикладских островах. Арфисты, вероятнее всего, являлись влиятельными членами общества, выполняя роль хранителей истории, мифологии и музыки своего времени в дописьменный период. Их можно назвать предшественниками актеров геройской Микенской эпохи, на которую ссылается Гомер в своих эпических поэмах, включая «Одиссею», или богатой традиции устной поэзии, в последующем сложившейся в Древней Греции.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Название: Сидящий арфист
  • Период: Конец Кикладского периода I–начало Кикладского периода II
  • Дата: около 2800–2700 гг. до н.э.
  • Культура: Киклады
  • Материал: Мрамор
  • Размер: Выс. 29,2 см
  • Благодарность: Фонд Роджерса, 1947
  • Номер объекта: 47.100.1
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

Audio

Доступно только в: English
Cover Image for 833. Kids: Marble seated harp player

833. Kids: Marble seated harp player

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Look up at the top shelf of this case. Find the white marble statuette of the man in a chair, holding a musical instrument—there are two very similar to each other. We’re going to look at the one on the left.

Do you recognize that three-sided instrument that he’s holding? Imagine strings running from top to bottom. This man’s playing a harp. His head bends back, as if he’s lost in the music. You’re listening to music played on a modern harp. But we’re not sure what this ancient Greek instrument sounded like. Have you ever tried playing a harp? It takes strong fingers. This figure has big, muscular fingers and arms. He might be a poet as well a musician. The ancient Greek poets spoke their verses out loud, and often accompanied themselves on stringed instruments like the harp.

This sculpture is more than four thousand years old. Like the other sculptures in this room, it comes from a group of islands named the Cyclades. The marble figures from the Cyclades are called Cycladic sculptures. Cycladic sculptures mark the beginning of a long history of Greek and Roman sculptures in marble, as you’ll see in some of the other rooms nearby.

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