Skeptics of polychromy question why greek and roman artists would have sculpted with such beautiful materials parian marble which was commonly used has a prized translucence and then painted.
Marble with polychromy.
The usual lekythos was a small terracotta vessel used to hold oil for funerary rituals but the shape was monumentalized and translated into marble for use as a grave marker.
Only a fragment of this marble lekythos survives.
Originally it had a cylindrical body.
This practice is also seen during the same period used on the sarcophagi of egyptian mummies.
1 polychromy in greek and roman sculpture is not limited to the application of pigments by painting on marble but includes a variety of other.
Polychrome is the practice of decorating architectural elements sculpture etc in a variety of colors the term is used to refer to certain styles of architecture pottery or sculpture in multiple colors.
The phrasikleia kore is a parian marble statue that features prominent polychromy as seen in the hair and the dress.
In the late 400s and early 300s b c greek grave monuments sometimes took the form of a large lekythos.
When roman marble sculpture was rediscovered in the renaissance it emerged from more than a millennium of burial essentially devoid of its ancient polychromy the monochromatic appearance of these works gave rise to new modern canons of sculpture characterized by an emphasis on form with little consideration of color.
It is thought that the skin of the phrasikleia kore was covered with a type of gum arabic to give it a realistic appearance.
What is sculptural polychromy.
Paul getty museum.
The myth of the white marble started during the renaissance when we first began unearthing ancient statues.
The term polychrome from greek poly many and chroma colour was first used by antoine chrysostôme quatremère de quincy in 1814 to denote the presence of colour on classical sculpture.
Most of them had lost their original paint after centuries of exposure to the elements.
Statuette of venus venus de clercq.