Prometheus
is a figure that has acquired the status of ‘martyr’ for the human
intellect and development. His suffering has been the subject of a large
variety of artworks through the ages remaining present in artistic
conventions on martyrdom and mythology. Chained to the scraggy precipice
of the Caucasus Mountains, Prometheus is visited daily by an eagle that
tears out parts of his liver, a practice and punishment that continues
into eternity. This endlessness is not solely the result of Prometheus’
immortality; the suffering continues because the Titan’s liver grows
back each night. What crime warrants such a grave punishment...
Prometheus
wasn’t human. Yet his story is as benefactor to mankind. The hero was a
Titan – one of the twelve pre-Olympic gods that were the direct
offspring of the primordial deities Gaia, mother earth, and Uranus, god
of the sky. When the Olympic gods decided to create mankind, they asked
Prometheus – ‘He who looks ahead’ (προ / pro – before, μανθάνω /
mantháno – thinking, understanding) – and his brother, Epimetheus – ‘The
thinker of the afterthought’ (επι / epi – after) – to provide humans
and animals with the correct characteristics. Epimetheus asked if he
could divide...
The
Prometheus myth has been handed down to us through the pens of several
different authors. Each of them added to or removed elements of the
story, altering the myth and its implications for society. All of these
adaptations can be located in the visual arts of classical antiquity.
This interplay between text and image is called iconography, and
Prometheus’ iconographical tradition is rooted in early formal image
making and begins at the same time and place as the stories, when the
myth was still a ‘living’ myth. This chapter will examine a selection of
the early correspondences between text...
Ancient
Greek medicine achieved its zenith in the figure of Hippocrates (ca.
460-377 BC). This physician, native to the isle of Kos, is seen as the
father of Western medicine (fig. 3.1). The Hippocratic Oath, the
foundational pledge of medical ethics that binds physicians to the
ethical and standardized care of their patient, is still pledged by
newly inaugurated doctors worldwide. Rational thoughts, based on
Hippocrates’ own observations and experiences, formed the cornerstone of
his medical manifesto. He operated on the basis of humoral pathology in
which four temperaments were distinguished and coupled to four types of
bodily fluids: blood,...
Within ancient Etruscan culture the haruspex,
the oracle, fulfilled an important societal function. He (women were
excluded from fulfilling this role) foretold the hidden intentions of
the gods – and thus the future – by reading animal entrails. Most often
the future was read in the liver of a sacrificed sheep. The
aforementioned bronze liver found in Piacenza served as an instructive
model for students who were training to become haruspex (fig. 3.2). The haruspex would cut the liver out of the sheep, hold it up in his left hand and run his right hand over the base of the...
One
of the most significant changes in the cultural landscape between
antiquity and the Middle Ages is the rise and spread of Christianity in
Europe. The new faith brought with it new stories that required new
modes of depiction. This raises the question of what role a pagan
classical figure like Prometheus could fulfil in this new world. In this
chapter, we shall answer that question.
The Middle Ages are a
time period that remains plagued by negative associations in the court
of public opinion: It is seen as a dark period of decay, the remnants of
the fall of...
Claudius
Galen (130-201 CE), born in Pergamon, was the most respected medical
authority from Graeco-Roman antiquity (fig. 6.1). His teachings, based
in large part on the writings of Hippocrates and Aristotle, defined
medical thought and practice for fifteen centuries. The work of Galen,
as he was more commonly called, was to the field of medicine what the
Bible was to the Church, and questioning it in any way was akin to
heresy.
Galen studied medicine in Pergamon (modern day Bergama in
north-western Turkey), after which he visited the famous medical schools
in Smyrna, Corinth, and Alexandria. He finally settled in...
Renaissance
means ‘rebirth.’ In the period of ca. 1453 to 1600, an interplay of
political, economic and cultural circumstances facilitated a tremendous
flourishing of the arts and sciences. People found a renewed interest in
classical antiquity, and this is strongly reflected in the art from
this period. The term ‘rebirth’ refers to this rekindled interest. In
these one hundred and fifty years, the figure and myth of Prometheus
also underwent a rebirth in kind.
Through the course of the late
Middle Ages, new texts from classical antiquity were reintroduced in
Western Europe. These texts had been preserved in Islamic countries,...
In
the beginning of the sixteenth century in Freiburg, somewhere between
1503 and 1519, the Carthusian monk and scholar Gregor Reich published a
remarkable work: the Margarita Philosophica¸ which translates
to ‘the pearl of philosophy.’ In this treatise, he outlines the current
state of scientific affairs in his era. This voluminous work can be seen
as the first encyclopaedia in print, and functions as a scientific
conclusion of the Middle Ages forming the base that the Renaissance
could be built upon. The book contains a plethora of high-quality,
hand-coloured woodcuts to illustrate theories. These include an
illustration of the human...
During
the transition from the Renaissance to the Baroque, we see a shift in
the way Prometheus is depicted: he changes from heroic thinker to heroic
tortured nude. In this chapter, we will showcase the masterpieces of
this era that take up Prometheus as their subject, and consider why the
punishment of Prometheus formed the ideal motif through which artists
expressed seventeenth-century artistic sensibilities.
The term
‘baroque’ may come from the Portuguese word ‘barroco’, which means
‘flawed pearl’. Even though the transition from the Renaissance to the
Baroque is a gradual one, the increase in drama and caprice in the...
The
quest to find truth through empirical observation that found its
origins in the Renaissance came to fruition in the seventeenth century.
The publication of the magnum opus of Vesalius, De Humani Corporis Fabrica¸
gave the study of anatomy a scientific basis that was then emulated by
many practitioners. The most significant milestone in the beginning of
the seventeenth century was the 1628 publication of William Harvey’s De motu cordis et sanguinis in animalibus,
in which this doctor and researcher described the workings of the
circulatory system and the heart. Harvey proved that blood was
circulated in a closed system...
In
the previous chapters, the art historical stylistic periodisation
encompasses quite large stretches of time. Despite undeniable technical
progress within artistic practice, the circumstances of patronage and
the climate around art commission and production remained relatively
uniform. Nobility, monarchy, and the Church remained present within
society and continued to represent the most significant client base for
prominent artists. By the end of the eighteenth century, this ‘client
base’ started to change. A succession of political, scientific, and
industrial revolutions heralded the dawn of a new era. While preceding
centuries are generally referred to as ‘pre-modern’ or ‘early-modern’,
these developments characterise...
One
of the most important scientists of the eighteenth century, often
called the last ‘homo universalis’ of his time, was the Swiss doctor
Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777, Fig. 12.1). He wasn’t solely a famed
doctor, anatomist, surgeon and physiologist, but he also made a name for
himself as a botanist and poet. He was the son of a lawyer from Bern
and showed signs of being a prodigy from a very young age. At only nine
years old, he composed a Hebrew and Greek dictionary from words that he
had managed to glean from the Bible. At the same age,...
At
the end of our chapter on modernity (chapter eleven), we discussed how
artists began to approach the subject of Prometheus in increasingly
individualistic ways. Instead of referencing a classical source,
Prometheus became a vehicle through which artists could express personal
convictions. This relationship was solidified in the twentieth century,
a period in which art movements followed one another in rapid
succession: expressionism, futurism, cubism, etc. The century is
sometimes affectionately called the ‘time of the many ‘-isms.’’ The
twentieth century was also shaped by two world wars, the effects of
which greatly impacted philosophical and artistic thought. In this...
In
the second half of the nineteenth century, it became possible to
operate on patients under general anaesthesia, enabling surgeons to
undertake larger and more invasive operations. Most procedures that
concern organs in the abdomen were first conceptualised of and performed
for the first time in the 1880s. The stomach, the large and small
intestine, the appendix and gallbladder could be partially or entirely
removed, respectively. The liver, however, was a latecomer. For a long
time, the liver was off limits to surgeons due to the high risk of
severe bleeding if the organ was cut. This organ contains a...
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