MAPEH 9 Q1 Arts Module 1
MAPEH 9 Q1 Arts Module 1
MAPEH 9 Q1 Arts Module 1
CLASSICAL
• Greek and Roman
MEDIEVAL ERA
• Baroque and Romanesque
PREHISTORIC ERA
— PAINTINGS
PREHISTORIC ERA
CLASSICAL ( GREEK
ERA )
Paintings during the classical era were most found
in 1. vases, 2. panels, and 3. tomb. It depicts natural
figures with dynamic compositions. Most of the
subjects were battle scenes, mythological figures,
and everyday scenes. It reveals a grasp of linear
perspective and naturalists representation.
MOST COMMON METHODS OF GREEK
PAINTING
1. Fresco is a method of painting water-based pigments on a
freshly applied plaster usually on a wall surfaces. Colors are
made with grind powder pigments in pure water, dry and set
with a plaster to become a permanent part of the wall. Ideal
for murals, durable and has a matte style.
( Head of Alexander )
Fresco from the Villa of Mysterias Boscotrecaso Pompeii
QUIZ TIME !!!
Part 1.
Direction: Guess the era/period the following paintings
came from.
example.
Direction: Guess the era/period the following paintings
came from.
example.
MEDIEVAL
ERA
The lively styles of painting which had been
invented in Greek and Rome lived on in
Byzantium but this time for Christian subjects.
Theodora was an
Asian Queen with
dark eyes and hair
with fierce
expression
ROMANESQUE PAINTING
Christ in Majesty
Christ wears a grayish white rove with a blue mantle.
Underneath the Mandorla (Italian word for Almond in
painting, it is used to describe an enclosure surrounding
holy figures) is a black band with white writing. Each
side of the center window ate three arches resting on
columns of capitals in green, red and black between of
figures of Virgin Mary and five saints are columns with
wavy line patterns going vertically
— PAINTINGS FROM
GOTHIC
ERA
Paintings have been confined in the
illumination of manuscript pages and the
painting of frescoes on the walls of churches
in cosmopolitan style elegant, mannered, and
sophisticated.
4.
Direction: Guess the era/period the following paintings
came from.
4.
Prehistoric Sculptures
Materials used in sculptures vary according to region
and locality. Archeologists believed that their sculpture
is a result of natural erosion and not of human artistry.
Frequently carving may have mythological or religious
significance.
It is carved from
limestone with
excessively heavy breast
and abdomen used as
charm to ensure fertility.
Venus of Willendorf
A sculpture of a lady
with the hood. It is a
fragmentary ivory
figurine from the Upper
Paleolithic era that
realistically represents
the human face and
hairstyle
Venus of Brassempouy
Mused'ArcheologieNationale at
Saint-German-entaye
SCULPTURES FROM THE EGYPTIAN
ERA
Shows an attitude of
maximum tension, full
of compressed energy
and about to explode
an action.
Most roman
sculptures are
made of
monumental
terra-cotta.
•Carved in marble
Sarcophagus, from cervetiri, c. 520 BCE
PREHISTORIC ARCHITECTURE
Man has developed a form of architecture based on
megaliths (a big rock) from
the Greek word ithos (stone) and megas (big).
This architecture is made of huge stone
blocks which were probably intended for burial.
It is a type of Egyptian
tomb in the
form of a flat roofed,
rectangular Structure
with outward sloping
sides. It was made of
mud-bricks or stone.
GREEK SCULPTURE
Temples consisted of a central shrine or room in an
aisle surrounded by rows of columns. These building
were designed in one of the three architectural style or
orders
The Parthenon
447-432 BC, Athens