Kenfield, 'Greek Architectural Terracottas from the Prehistoric to the end of the Archaic Period', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9411
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9411-kenfield-greek
@@@@94.11.5, Winter, Greek Architectural Terracottas
Nancy A. Winter, Greek Architectural Terracottas from the
Prehistoric to the end of the Archaic Period. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1993. Pp. 360. $85.00. ISBN 0-19-814794-5.
Reviewed by John F. Kenfield -- Rutgers University
Excepting Asia Minor and the Aegean islands, a survey as broad
as Nancy Winter's was last attempted in two volumes by E.D. van
Buren some 68 years ago. In the meantime, an enormous amount of
new material has been excavated and published thereby
simultaneously enriching and complicating attempts at
understanding this often beautiful and practically ubiquitous
material. As a result, providing a detailed overview of
panhellenic production during the Archaic period has become a
dauntingly monumental task, one for which Winter is among the few
scholars with a sufficiently encyclopedic knowledge.
Winter, as head of the Carl Blegen Library, is ideally
positioned for the task, aided by her proximity to both the
Mainland Greek material itself, often those who excavated it,
and, of course, the peerless research collection under her
direction. Moreover, and perhaps most importantly, the breadth of
her endeavor, her energy, and her scholarly generosity led Winter
to organize international conferences on the material under the
equally generous auspices of the American School of Classical
Studies in Athens. It is, therefore, gratifying to all of us who
work on architectural terracottas that her efforts have finally
come to fruition in Greek Architectural Terracottas from the
Prehistoric to the End of the Archaic Period.
At the book's beginning, besides the lists of contents, plates
(131), figures (26), maps (6), tables (13), and abbreviations,
the reader who is inexperienced with architectural terracottas
will find a helpful glossary of terms used in the field. The
following Introduction, labelled Chapter 1, states the intentions
and the self-imposed limitations of the volume, the methodology
by which those intentions will be achieved, and reviews previous
scholarship in the field. Chapter 2, entitled Prehistoric Greek
Roof Tiles, briefly reviews the problematic evidence for
terracotta roofs from Aegean Bronze Age contexts.
The real subject of the book begins with Chapter 3 which
discusses the roofs of the Protocorinthian System, almost
certainly the earliest of the historical period, and, since all
later systems in one way or another seem to descend from it, the
Protocorinthian System's seminal role.
Chapter 4 traces the development of the Corinthian System.
Because of the great quantity of known examples and because so
many of the other Mainland Greek systems respond strongly to it,
as do those in East Greece and the West to a certain extent, the
discussion is very detailed, occupying a full quarter of the
book. It is in the context of the Corinthian and other Mainland
Greek systems that Winter's encyclopedic knowledge, based on
firsthand study, is most apparent. One of Winter's more
interesting observations concerning the Corinthian System is the
appearance of an archaizing tendency in terms of both profile and
decoration in Late Archaic roofs. Apparently following the
Corinthian lead, this archaizing tendency soon manifests itself
in other Mainland systems, too. It seems that this phenomenon is
perhaps even more widespread than Winter realizes, occurring in
the early decades of the fifth century BC at such far-flung and
relatively remote inland sites as Morgantina in central eastern
Sicily. (To Winter's impeccable bibliography add Marie-Francoise
Billot's study of those Corinthian simas with an ovolo profile,
sometimes called "Megarian": "Observations sur les simas
'megariennes,'" Varia Anatolica III, eds. J. des Courtils
and J.-C. Moretti [Paris, 1993] 119-216.)
Chapter 5 deals with the second major roofing system in
Archaic Greece, the Laconian. Like the Corinthian, it is probably
a first generation descendant of the Protocorinthian System, but
its inception antedates the appearance of the Corinthian and may,
indeed, be contemporary with the later examples of
Protocorinthian roofs. Though pure Laconian roofs are a much more
local phenomenon than Corinthian, the Laconian System's influence
is, in one way or another, felt by almost all others in the
Hellenic world, and, because of its lightness, simplicity, and
resulting economy of production, becomes, in the Classical and
Hellenistic periods, and even down to this day, the most
successful system, especially for utilitarian and domestic
buildings.
Chapter 6 discusses in detail the North-Western Greek System
found in Aetolia and Corfu. Despite the fact that this system
uses details of both the Corinthian and Laconian systems, its
overall visual impression is unique. Perhaps the most individual
contribution of the North-Western Greek System is the use of
heads in relief of varying depth on antefixes, an invention which
has profound influence on architectural terracotta decoration in
Italy, Sicily, East Greece, and, to a lesser extent, some of the
other systems of Mainland Greece. Though appropriately sceptical,
Winter reiterates Torelli's theory that antefixes decorated with
heads were invented by two Cretans, Dipoinos and Skyllis, sons of
Daidalos, who left their native island and migrated first to
Sikyon, thence to Aetolia, and finally to Italy. In spite of the
inconvenient fact that no antefixes decorated with heads have as
yet been found at Sikyon, this theory is attractive because
antefixes decorated with gorgoneia and lion heads are known from
Crete and, though largely unexplored by Winter, other Cretan
influence seems apparent in the architectural terracotta
production of South Italy, Sicily, and Etruria throughout the
Archaic period. But more on this issue later. A new suggestion is
offered for identifying the female headed antefixes as sphinxes.
Indeed, the issue of their identity and meaning has vexed Winter
and others ever since her 1978 RM publication. For a more
recent alternative interpretation specific to Sicilian female
head antefixes, see M. Mertens-Horn "Una nuova antefissa a testa
femminile da Akrai ed alcune considerazioni sulle Ninfe di
Sicilia," Bd'A 66 (1991) 9-28. It would seem that female
head antefixes could have different meanings in different places.
Chapter 7 deals with the Arcadian System which closely
resembles the Laconian but is somewhat more exuberant. This
exuberance is manifested primarily in the use of geison tiles and
the system's antefixes which regularly employ both floral and
figural relief decoration.
In Chapter 8, Winter deals with the Argive Systems. The first,
more original local variant also seems to have developed from the
Protocorinthian in the mid-seventh century B.C. Though found
principally in the Argolid, perhaps the system's most famous
example is the early roof from the sanctuary of Aphaia on Aegina.
Beginning in the first quarter of the sixth century, a
Corinthianizing workshop coexists with this more idiosyncratic
local system and its production is continuous down through the
period covered by this book.
Chapter 9 deals with the Central Greek System which is found
in Thessaly, Lokris, Phokis, Boiotia, and perhaps Euboia. Early
examples of the system share a number of similarities with the
indigenous Argive (perhaps through Aeginetan agency?), but use
different decorative details. As so often on the Mainland, after
ca. 570 B.C., the Central Greek System seems increasingly to
depend on the Corinthian. Though less prolific, there also seems
to have been a Laconicizing workshop in central Greece.
Due to the intensive excavations on both the Athenian
Akropolis and in the Agora, the Attic System, which forms the
subject of Chapter 10, is well-documented and thoroughly studied.
The earliest terracotta roofs known from Attic contexts do not
date until the early years of the sixth century. This fact can
perhaps be seen as another facet of the poorly understood
centrifugal tendencies of the Athenian aristocracy throughout
most of the seventh century, and its apparent lack of interest in
staying abreast of the latest political, social, economic and
artistic developments emanating from other poleis where
the centralizing power of the state was stronger. Once the state
asserts it authority by making the sanctuary of Athena on the
Akropolis the focus of a major state-sponsored cult, the system
commences. From the beginning, the Attic System is highly
eclectic, much like the architecture these roofs protected and
decorated, mixing elements of the Central Greek, Argive, and
Argive Corinthianizing systems. From this milieu, a local Attic
style emerges around the middle of the sixth century. As might be
expected, East Greek or Ionian influence first becomes apparent
around 540 B.C. and heavy from ca. 520 on.
Though Chapter 11 is entitled the Aegean Island System, it
subsumes two interrelated but separate systems. The first
considers those decorated roofs found in Greek cities on the Asia
Minor littoral, and, even, to a certain extent, those found at
indigenous Asiatic cities. Here Winter's firsthand knowledge is
less complete than for Mainland Greece as she readily admits. The
monumental work on this material remains A. Akerstroem's Die
Architektonischen Terrakotten Kleinasiens, which
appeared in 1966 and on which Winter builds, adding new material
discovered in subsequent excavations and offering new opinions
about dating. Though not addressed by Winter, one of the system's
major dating questions concerns the retarded adoption of
terracotta roofing in Hellenic contexts in Asia Minor. Though the
system's inception is essentially contemporary with the Attic, it
is not clear that the causes for the delay were the same.
Another problem concerns some of the characteristics of this
system, its penchant for relief decoration and for the treatment
as a continuous frieze of both simas and geison revetments. It is
well-known, for example, that these molded revetments have an
affinity with similar revetments found at both indigenous Italic
sites and at some South Italian, mostly Achaean colonial Greek
sites, and at one ethnically mixed site in Sicily. Regrettably
Winter does not attempt a speculative overview of this
potentially rich area of inquiry. The interested reader should,
however, consult M. Mertens-Horn "Die archaischen Baufriese aus
Metapont" RM 99 (1992) 1-122, who argues that the earliest
known chariot frieze sima is that from the sanctuary of Diktaian
Zeus at Palaikastro in East Crete and dates to the late seventh
century. (Winter dates this sima to ca. 480 BC!) Could it be
revetments of this type originated on Crete and, although not
mentioned by Pliny, that the Cretans Dipoinos and Skyllis are
responsible for the transmission to the West not only of
antefixes decorated with heads, but of simas with modeled
moldings and figural scenes in raised relief treated as
continuous friezes? The possibility of such a route of
transmission is strengthened by Mertens-Horn's presentation of a
fragment, now housed in the Staatliche Antikensammlingen in
Munich, which was made in the same mold as the Palaikastro sima
and is said to have been found in South Italy.
While too plentiful to enumerate in the context of a review,
there are a host of other instances of what appears to be Cretan
influence on Western production. For example, the palmette
antefixes from Knossos and Gortyn, both mentioned by Winter in
Chapter 11, have their closest connections with a series of
similar revetments from Morgantina. Winter makes passing
reference to some of the Morgantina examples under the heading
"Sicilian Eaves Tiles" in Chapter 12, but neglects, perhaps out
of deference to this reviewer's forthcoming work, to make the
connection with Crete, though it was, indeed, she who first
brought the Cretan revetments to my attention. In fact, the
finest of these Morgantina revetments comes from a late Archaic
roof in which multiple instances of Cretan influence appear.
The second subchapter of Chapter 11 concerns the Aegean Island
System proper and its similarities with and differences from
production on the nearby mainland of Asia Minor. Both Samos and
Thasos, though at almost diagonally opposite corners of the
Aegean and distinct in their production, are prominent in this
discussion because excavations there have produced large
quantities of terracotta revetments. Thasian production, known
mostly from the buildings in the sanctuary of Herakles, appears
highly eclectic, but fits in comfortably with other north Aegean
production. For example, the semicircular antefixes with a
dentate border, an inner frame of molded leaves or a fascia with
painted decoration surrounding a central motif in raised relief
are found at the Herakleion on Thasos and are associated with the
Temple of Apollo at Neandria. Remarkably, though far afield, the
closest parallels for antefixes of this type are found in
Campania, a complicated and poorly understood connection that
Winter does not venture to explore in spite of the fact that the
production of Campanian Kyme, the earliest Greek colony in the
West, is relatively well-known and appears to have been seminal
in the creation of the Campanian and South Etruscan systems. The
reader interested in the architectural terracotta production of
Kyme and its relationship to those of other Campanian centers as
well as the greater Greek world should consult the excellent but
little-known monograph by L.A. Scatozza "Le terrecotte
architettoniche cumane di eta arcaica," Klearchos 22
(1971) 45-111.
Indeed, the Campanian System, now that the subject has been
broached, seems to evince another important influence which
Winter does not mention from yet another Greek system. In
discussing the female head antefixes of the North-Western Greek
System, Winter mentions that "the plaque to either side of the
head was painted with a cream-colored volute descending from atop
the head and ending in a spiral," an unusual device appearing
elsewhere, to the best of my knowledge, only on Campanian and
South Etruscan female head antefixes. On these Italian examples,
the volutes are often distinguished by relief as well as by
paint. In describing these volutes, Winter also attempts to
strengthen her previously mentioned suggestion that female head
antefixes represent sphinxes, at least in the North-Western Greek
System. Are we by analogy to conclude that female head antefixes
in the Campanian and South Etruscan Systems also represent
sphinxes? Palmette and occasionally gorgoneion antefixes in these
and other Italian systems often display similar volutes. It
appears that if the volutes were ever meant to designate
sphinxes, they had lost that meaning in the West.
One other addition should be made to Winter's discussion of
the Aegean Island System. On p. 242, Winter discusses unusual
lateral simas from Larisa and Temnos which use gorgoneion and
feline head appliques. Besides the obvious connections with
North-Western Greece, Crete, and Sicily, a new fragment,
apparently from the same mold as the sima from Temnos, has been
found at Miletos as reported by V. von Graeve and R. Senff "Milet
1990/ Kalabaktepe" IstMitt 41(1991) 132, pl. 24, fig. 2.
Another roof of perhaps early Classical date which uses the same
motifs has been found at Olympia (See A. Heiden "Klassische
Daecher aus Olympia" Hesperia suppl. 27 [forthcoming]).
In Chapter 12, Winter moves on to the Western Greek Systems
encompassing four subchapters. The first deals with Sicilian
roofs and the second with South Italian roofs. As was the case
with her treatment of the Aegean Island System of Chapter 11,
Winter's knowledge is based primarily on publications of the
material rather than comprehensive firsthand examination, and, as
a result, her treatment, in both instances, is less thorough than
that provided for the Mainland Greek systems. Fortunately, major
studies of both the Sicilian and South Italian material have
appeared in recent years. For Sicily, there is Charlotte
Wikander's 1986 monograph entitled Sicilian Architectural
Terracottas: A Reappraisal, which though advancing some
important new ideas which Winter adopts, deals exclusively with
previously published simas and geison revetments, ignoring both
the other components of the roofs as well as roofs that used
antefixes rather than simas at the eaves. For those revetments
not considered by Wikander, Winter has had to rely on small
studies of the roofs of particular buildings and on excavation
reports. The result is that a lot of material that has languished
unpublished in museums and excavation storerooms is not
considered. See now M. Mertens-Horn, "Una nuova antefissa a testa
femminile da Akrai ed alcune considerazioni sulle Ninfe di
Sicilia" Bd'A 66 (1991) 9-28, and my "A Modelled
Terracotta Frieze from Archaic Morgantina: Its East Greek and
Central Italic Affinities" Deliciae Fictiles eds. C.
Wikander and E. Rystedt (Stockholm, 1993) 21-28].
Winter's knowledge of the South Italian material relies
primarily on the fundamental monographs of D. Mertens on the
Archaic roofs of Metapontion and Kroton and his more
comprehensive studies in Megale Hellas: Atti XXI CSMG
(Taranto, 1982) and Neue Forschungen in griechischen
Heiligtuemern (Tubingen, 1976). As mentioned above, the only
major lacuna in Winter's discussion of the Western Greek Systems
is her decision not to grapple with Campania which is somewhat
surprising given the fact that her studies of female head
antefixes of necessity involved her heavily in the architectural
terracotta production of that region. In any event, the most
interesting new scholarship on South Italian Greek material to
appear since the volume under review went to press is M.
Mertens-Horn's previously mentioned monograph "Die archaischen
Baufriese aus Metapont" RM 99 (1992) 1-122. In addition,
Peter Danner in his brief "Figuren an Simaecken - eine Form
ostgriechischer Architekturdekoration im griechischen Westen"
Varia Anatolica III eds. J. des Courtils and J.-C. Moretti
(Paris, 1993) 253-260 recognizes the strong East Greek
connections of a sima from Paestum. The corners of this sima are
decorated with winged female figures, presumably Nikai, in such
high relief as to be almost freestanding. Danner rightly compares
these figures with the Nikai from the corners of the architrave
of the Temple of Apollo at Didyma.
Subchapters three and four concern first Western Greek roofs
on Mainland Greece, i.e. at Olympia and Delphi, and second, those
roofs from Corfu which, beginning ca. 580, come under heavy
Western Greek influence. In both instances, the latest
scholarship, largely interpretive, consists of the contributions
of M. Mertens-Horn and C. Wikander to the First International
Conference on Archaic Greek Architectural Terracottas which
Winter organized and which appear in Hesperia 59 (1990).
Chapter 13 is entitled "Technical Discussion" and includes
subheadings on manufacture, placement or laying of tiles, and
tile stamps and inscriptions. These facets of roof-making have
been mentioned by Winter wherever appropriate throughout the
preceding chapters, so this chapter is something of a summary. I
might at this juncture say that Winter's decision to deal with
the undecorated utilitarian tiles is most welcome and will
hopefully spur on excavators' growing attention to these less
glamorous members of roofing systems.
There is one other suggestion that might be appropriately made
under the rubric of "Technical Discussion" in connection with
stamps and inscriptions. Apparently some tiles in the Sicilian
System, especially ridge tiles, bear incised or painted
doodle-like representations of real or mythical creatures on the
top of the exterior of the saddle, a position where they would
never be seen by anyone other than those making repairs to the
apex of the roof. As I reported in Hesperia 59 (1990), the
most extensive set of such tiles comes from the roof of a Late
Archaic temple at Morgantina, and, in this instance, the doodle
on each tile represents a different creature. It would be
interesting to know if this phenomenon is unique to Morgantina.
The last chapter, 14, is entitled "Conclusions," and, as might
be expected, sums up the information presented in much greater
detail in the previous 13 chapters. Perhaps delving more fully
into the cultural context of these roofs would have unacceptably
broadened the scope of the book, but this reader could not help
wishing that there had been more speculation on both the
connection between these roofs and the developments that were
simultaneously occurring in the buildings below, as well as the
social, political, and economic environment in which these
considerable projects were effected. The fact that the
conversions from thatch or wooden shingles to terracotta roofs
and from wood and mud brick to cut blocks and columns of stone in
the building below happen at the same time is surely significant.
Similarly, the enormity of effort and the organizational skill
required for the construction of these sometimes large temples
seems to presuppose the emergence of the polis and its
consolidation of power as, indeed, Winter's occasional invocation
of Periander, Pheidon, Kroisos, and Polykrates would imply.
Finally, following the Conclusions of Chapter 14, the reader
will find a list of ancient authors consulted, a museum
concordance which lists each tile or fragment by museum where
housed, find or accession number, and, if it is illustrated in
this volume, its plate and/or figure numbers. The museum
concordance is followed by an index.
In spite of the few minor suggestions this reviewer has made,
Greek Architectural Terracottas from the Prehistoric to the
End of the Archaic Period is a truly monumental effort by one
of the few, if not the only scholar in the world with the
encyclopedic knowledge requisite for providing a credible
overview of these diverse and complicated systems.