Cover image for Art of the first cities : the third millennium B.C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus
Art of the first cities : the third millennium B.C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus
Title:
Art of the first cities : the third millennium B.C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus
Author:
Aruz, Joan, editor.
ISBN:
9781588390431

9781588390448

9780300098839
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xxiv, 540 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color), 1 map ; 32 cm.
General Note:
Catalog of an exhibition held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, May 8-Aug. 17, 2003.

Exhibition title: Art of the first cities : the third millennium B.C. from the Mediterranean to the Indus.
Contents:
Art of the first cities / Uruk and the formation of the city / Art of the early city-states / Proto-Elamite period / Fara / Excavations in the Diyala Region / Stone sculpture production / Nippur / Tello (Ancient Girsu) / Metalworking techniques / Al Ubaid / Kish / Royal tombs of Ur / Tomb of Puabi / Great death pit at Ur / Mari and the Syro-Mesopotamian world / Treasure of Ur from Mari / Ebla and the early urbanization of Syria / Tell Umm el-Marra / Tell Banat / Art of the Akkadian Dynasty / Lost-wax casting / Tell Mozan (Ancient Urkesh) / Tell Brak in the Akkadian period / Art and interconnections in the third millennium B.C. / Egypt and the Near East in the third millennium B.C./ Aegean and Western Anatolia / Early bronze age jewelry hoard from Kolonna, Aigina / Troy / Poliochni and the civilization of the Northeastern Aegean / Central Anatolian plateau : the tombs of Alaca H[232}oy©ơk / North Caucasus / Maikop (Oshad) kurgan / Novosvobodnay / Susa / Gulf : Dilmun and Magan / Copper alloys and metal sources / Tell Abraq / Island of Tarut / Intercultural style carved chlorite objects / Pathways across Eurasia / Altyn-depe / Gonur-depe / Indus Civilization / Baluchistan / Cities of the Indus Valley / Beads of the Indus Valley / Approaching the divine / Rediscovery of Gudea statuary in the Hellenistic period / Earliest scholastic tradition / Uruk and the world of Gilgamesh / Mesopotamian legacy
Abstract:
Our civilization is rooted in the forms and innovations of societies that flourished more than six thousand years ago in distant lands of western Asia, extending from Egypt to India. The earliest of these societies was in the region known to the ancients as Mesopotamia, which occupies what is today Iraq, northeastern Syria, and southeastern Turkey. In Mesopotamia arose the first cities, and here urban institutions were invented and evolved. Writing was invented, monumental architecture in the form of temples and palaces were created, and the visual arts flowered in the service of religion and royalty. These extraordinary innovations profoundly affected surrounding areas in Anatolia, Syria-Levant, Iran, and the Gulf. Mesopotamia was influenced in turn by these outlying regions, for as networks of trade emerged they encouraged cultural exchange. This publication explores the artistic achievements of the era of the first cities in both the Mesopotamian heartland and across the expanse of western Asia. More than fifty experts in the field have contributed entries on individual works of art and essays covering a wide range of subjects. Among the objects presented are many that display the pure style of Mesopotamia, others from outlying regions that adapt from Mesopotamian models a corpus of forms and images, and still others that embody vital regional styles. Included are reliefs celebrating the accomplishments of kings and the pastimes of the elite; votive statues representing royal and other privileged persons; animal sculptures; and spectacular jewelry, musical instruments, and games found in tombs where kings, queens, and their servants were buried. -- Metropolitan Museum of Art website.
Holds: Copies: