16/11/2020 Relief Sculpture: Definition, Types, History
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Pentelic, Carrara, Parian marbles.
Bronze Sculpture
Lost-wax casting/sandcasting.
Wood Carving
Softwoods and hardwoods.
within a sharpely incised contour line that frames it with a powerful line of
shadow. The surrounding surface remains untouched, with no projections.
Sunken relief carving is found almost exclusively in ancient Egyptian art,
although it has also been used in some beautiful small-scale ivory reliefs from
India.
In addition to the basic types listed above, there is an extremely subtle type
of flat low relief carving, known as Statiacciato relief (rilievo schiacciato),
that is particularly associated with the 15th century sculptor Donatello. This
statiacciato design is partly rendered with finely engraved chiselled lines and
partly carved in relief. It depends for its effect on the way in which pale-
coloured materials, like white marble, react to light and show up the most
delicate lines and changes of texture.
Reliefs may be abstract in style as well as representational or figurative.
Abstract reliefs, both geometric and curvilinear, have been found in many
different cultures, including those of Ancient Greece, the Celts, Mexico, the
Vikings, and Islam. Representational and figurative relief sculpture is strongly
associated with the Greeks, the Romans, Romanesque and Gothic
architecture, and European sculpture from the Renaissance onwards.
History of Relief Sculpture
In simple terms, the development of relief sculpture was marked by swings
between pictorial and sculptural dominance. For instance in Greek art, reliefs
are more like contracted sculpture than expanded pictures. Figures inhabit a
space which is defined by the solid forms of the figures themselves and is
limited by the background plane. This background plane is not used to create
a receding perspective but rather as a finite impenetrable barrier in front of
which the figures exist. By comparison, Renaissance relief sculpture makes full
use of perspective, which is a pictorial method of representing 3-D spatial
relationships on a 2-D surface, and thus has much in common with fine art
painting.
Prehistoric Relief Sculpture
The earliest reliefs date back to the cave art of the Upper Paleolithic, around
25,000 BCE. The oldest relief sculptures in France are: the Venus of Laussel
(23,000 BCE), a limestone bas-relief of a female figure, found in the Dordogne;
the rare Abri du Poisson Cave Salmon Carving (23,000 BCE) at Les Eyzies de
Tayac, Perigord; the Solutrean Roc-de-Sers Cave Frieze (17,200 BCE) in the
Charente; the Magdalenian era Cap Blanc Frieze (15,000 BCE); the Tuc
d'Audoubert Bison (13,500 BCE); and the outstanding limestone frieze at Roc-
aux-Sorciers (12,000 BCE) found in the Vienne. Outside France there are the
badly preserved clay reliefs in the Kapova Cave in Russia. Other reliefs have
been found incised on numerous megaliths from the Neolithic era.
Note About Sculpture Appreciation
To learn how to evaluate high-relief and low-relief sculpture, see:
How to Appreciate Sculpture. For later works, please see: How to
Appreciate Modern Sculpture.
Ancient Relief Sculpture
During the civilizations of the Ancient World (c.3,500-600 BCE), reliefs were
commonly seen on the surfaces of stone buildings in ancient Egypt, Assyria
and other Middle Eastern cultures. An example of Mesopotamian sculpture is
the set of lions and dragons from the Ishtar Gate, Babylon, executed in low
relief. See also the alabaster carvings of lion-hunts featuring Ashurnasirpal II
and Ashurbanipal, a typical example of Assyrian art (c.1500-612 BCE).
Egyptian sculptors tended to employ sunken relief. Figures are depicted
standing sideways and are contained within a sharply insized outline: see for
instance the many sunken reliefs at the Temple of Karnak in Egypt. Low reliefs
were especially common in Chinese sculpture. For a guide to the principles
behind Oriental arts, see: Traditional Chinese Art: Characteristics.
High reliefs did not become common until Classical Antiquity (c.500 BCE
onwards), when Ancient Greek sculptors began to explore the genre more
thoroughly. Attic tomb relief sculpture dating from the 4th century BCE are