Jump to content

Persian-Sassanid art patterns: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Reverted edits by Emileyjohnson977719 (talk) to last revision by Negareshgar (HG)
Replaced content with 'This stinks. Hi. -- Blacksn0w.'
Tags: blanking gettingstarted edit
Line 1: Line 1:
This stinks. Hi. -- Blacksn0w.
[[Image:Lestniza-fight-wiki.jpg|thumb|180px|right|Lion and griffin fighting, Lestnitsa treause ([[Lovech]]).]]
{{essay|date=February 2013}}
{{copy edit|date=February 2013}}
'''[[Persian Empire|Persian]]-[[Sassanide]] art patterns''' have similarities with the art of the Bulgars, Khazars and Sak-Scythians, and have recurred in Asia. They predominantly feature animal fighting motifs. Gold was frequently use as a base for their art creations.

== Patterns ==
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:BGGriffin-wiki.jpg|thumb|220px|left|'[[Griffin]] fighting an [[elk]]' - scene from the [[Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós]] (Height 22 cm, weight 608 g.)<ref>Kells Portraits and Eastern Ornament by Harold Picton in The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 73, No. 426 (Sep., 1938), pp. 121-123.</ref> currently on divided display in the [[Kunsthistorisches Museum]] in [[Vienna]] and the [http://www.historymuseum.org/ National Museum of History], [[Sofia]].]] -->
[[Image:Turpan-gold.jpg|thumb|220px|right|[[Turpan]] gold - beasts attacking each other.]]
Characteristic patterns of the [[Persian Empire|Persian]]-[[Sassanide]] art exhibits similarity to the art of the [[Bulgars]],<ref>Bulgarian's Treasures from the Past by Ivan Venedikov, Sava Boyadjiev and Dimiter Kartalev, Foreign Languages Press, Sofia 1965, pp. 345-55</ref> [[Khazars]], Sak-[[Scythian]], and have recurred at different locations in Central [[Asia]]. Hundred and eight years after the excavation of the [[Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós]]' (1799) with a [[toreutics]] expo of '[[griffin]] fighting an [[elk]]' (see figure on the left) - another [[griffin]]-&-[[elk]] motif has been discovered in the tombs of [[Hsiung-nu]]<ref>The Empire of the Steppes, a History of Central Asia by Rene Grousset (transl. by Naomi Walford), Rutgers University Press, 2005, p.25</ref> (early [[Huns]], also [[Xiongnu]]) during Colonel [[Pyotr Kuzmich Kozlov]]<ref>Buddha: Radiant Awakening by Jackie Menzies, Sydney, Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2001</ref><ref>Wildlife of the Tibetan Steppe by George B. Schaller, University Of Chicago Press, 2000, p.11</ref> expedition (1907–09) near [[Urga]] (Outer [[Mongolia]]).<ref>Discoveries of the Kozlov Expedition by W. Perceval Yetts, he Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs, Vol. 48, No. 277 (Apr., 1926), pp. 168-185</ref><ref>The Pazirik Burial of Altai by Eugene A. Golomshtok, M. P. Griaznov in American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 37, No. 1 (Jan. - Mar., 1933), pp. 30-45</ref><ref>Recent Russian Archaeological Exploration by W. E. D. Allen in The Geographical Journal, Vol. 69, No. 3 (Mar., 1927), pp. 262-264</ref>

<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Xiongnu belt buckleB.jpg|thumb|200px|left|A [[Xiongnu]]/[[Hsiung-nu]] belt buckle.]] -->

A [[gold]] symbolization of 'animals-in-fight' has been also found in the vicinity of the city of [[Turpan]]<ref>The Old Silk Road - from Xi'an to Pamir, Chapter XIII: A Tour of Turpan by Bi Yading, Chinese Intercontinental Press (CIP) 2003, p.121 (ISBN 7-5032-2125-9)</ref> - the principle crossroad of the northern [[Silk Road]] (see the [[Turpan]] gold on your right). [[Gold]]en 'animals-in-fight' has also been identified as 3rd – 2nd century B.C. [[Mongolia]] (or southern [[Siberia]]), being charactteristic for [[Hsiung-nu]] or [[Xiongnu]] (see the scene of paired felines attacking ibexes as a cast of golden belt buckle on your left).

==The Art of the Nomads==
[[Image:SnowLeopard-wiki.jpg|thumb|220px|lright|Sak-[[Scythian]] [[alluvial]] [[gold]] from the streams of [[Altay Mountains]].]]
The early history of the [[Nomads]] is shrouded with enigma, which lifts somewhat only after their contact with cultures possessing written history. [[Nomadic]] people of the vast steppes of [[Asia]] were a major force in history.<ref>The Perilous Frontier by Thomas J. Barfield, lackwell Publishers, 1989</ref> Their power was not in the empires they built, but rather, it was the turmoil they have created on [[ancient civilizations]] such as [[China]] or [[Persia]], affecting substantially their historical development.<ref>Worriors of the Steppe by Erik Hildinger, De Capo Press, 1997, pp. 57-92</ref> It is believed that the [[nomads]] ranged relentlessly and widely, forever moving on for sake of richer grazing for their horses and sheep. [[Nomad|Migrations]] were often seasonal. In the course of such migrations [[nomads]] wove for themselves an imperishable and precious intimacy with their land and its natural resources. They could extract [[gold]] with unprecedented ease. In summer, during the tribe's seasonal migration, a [[Wool|fleece]] would be weighted on a riverbed to collect particles of [[alluvial]] [[gold]]. Upon the tribes' return, the [[Wool|fleece]] would be sheared, burned, and [[gold]] ingot the size of a horse's hoof would result. The 'tay tayak' (the horse's hoof) was a unit of gold for a long period: a measure of golden metal rather than money, since gold was not fabricated as currency. Usage of gold was essentially spiritual - as emblems of priestly office, of prizes for physical prowess in ritual sport, or as adornment of the sacral ceremony of marriage.<ref>Kazakhstan, Coming of Age by Michael Fergus and Janar Jandosova, Stacey International 2003, p.106 (ISBN 1-900988-615)</ref>

== Art Recursion ==
[[Image:Lukovit-wiki.jpg|thumb|200px|right|'[[Lion]] fighting an [[elk]]' - scene from the [[Lukovit treasure|Treasure of Lukovit]], [[Vratza]].]]
Barthes had discussed the art patterns as narratives of cultural coexistence (for details see: Introduction to structural analysis of narratives<ref>A Barthes Reader by Roland Barthes, Hill & Wang, 1983, p.251</ref>). However, Spivey summirizes that cultural coexistence is not the single reason to explain the [[phenomenon]] of art being recursive.<ref>How Art Made the World, A Journey to the Origins of Human Creativity by Nigel Spivey, Bbasic Books 2005, p.89</ref> Chomsky ''at al.'' argued that the core property of human communication (in a 'narrow' sense, including language) is [[recursion]].<ref>The Faculty of Language: What Is It, Who Has It, and How Did It Evolve? by Marc D. Hauser, Noam Chomsky,W. Tecumseh Fitch in Science (2002), 298, pp.1569-79</ref> According to Chomsky ''at al.'' [[recursion]] is attributed to limited [[syntax]] in the conception - with a finite set of elements to yield a potentially infinite array of discrete expressions. Thomas explaines the art recursion (in a 'broad' sense) with imposion of [[archetypal]] structures<ref>Depth Psychology of Art by Shaun McNiff, Charles C. Thomas Publisher, 1989, p.33</ref> existing beyond the faculty of human communication. Studying Persian-Sassanide art patterns and possibly their early Nomadic conceptions is uncovering their symbols (symbolism)<ref>Philosophy of Analogy and Symbolism by S. T. Cargill, Kessinger Publishing, 1997, p.13</ref> and creative imagination.<ref>New Essays on the Psychology of Art by Rudolf Arnheim, University of California Press, 1986, p.31</ref><ref>The Afghan Amulet: Travels from the Hindu Kush by Sheila Paine, Tauris Parke Paperbacks, 2006, p.249</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist}}

== See also ==
* [[Iranian art]]
* [[History of decorative arts]]
* [[Toreutics]]
* [[Asian art]]
* [[Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós]]
* [[Hunnic Empire]]
* [[Xiongnu]]
* [[Scythian art]]
* [[Thraco-Cimmerian]]
* [[Turko-Persian tradition]]

[[Category:Art history]]
[[Category:Late Roman Empire art]]
[[Category:Persian history]]
[[Category:Iconography]]

Revision as of 17:14, 6 December 2013

This stinks. Hi. -- Blacksn0w.