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Kore (sculpture) - Wikipedia
Kore (Greek: κόρη "maiden"; plural korai) is the modern term [1] given to a type of free-standing ancient Greek sculpture of the Archaic period depicting female figures, always of a young age. Kouroi are the youthful male equivalent of kore statues.
Smarthistory – Kouroi and Korai, an introduction
From 600 to 480 B.C.E., ancient Greek cemeteries and sanctuaries were filled with marble statues of beautiful young men and women. The images of nude young men are today called kouroi (singular: kouros), the ancient Greek word for boy, though we do not know if they were called kouroi in antiquity.
Kore | Greek Art & Symbolism | Britannica - Encyclopedia Britannica
Kore, type of freestanding statue of a maiden—the female counterpart of the kouros, or standing youth—that appeared with the beginning of Greek monumental sculpture in about 660 bc and remained to the end of the Archaic period in about 500 bc.
Smarthistory – Peplos Kore
Thousands of years later, in 1886, Greek archaeologists excavated one of these pits just northwest of a temple known as the Erechtheion. Within it they found several statues of young women. The most famous of them is today known as the Peplos Kore.
Peplos Kore - Wikipedia
The Peplos Kore is an ancient sculpture from the Acropolis of Athens. It is considered one of the best-known examples of Archaic Greek art . Kore is a type of archaic Greek statue that portrays a young woman with a stiff posture looking straight forward.
The Ancient Greek Kouros and Kore - DailyArt Magazine
Feb 9, 2024 · Archaic Greek statues depicting youths are referred to with modern designated terms: Kouros (Kouroi plural) for the unbearded male youths and Kore (Korai plural) for young maidens. Made of marble or limestone, the statues tend to be life-size.
Korai of the Acropolis of Athens - Wikipedia
The Korai of the Acropolis of Athens are a group of female statues , discovered in the Perserschutt of the Acropolis of Athens in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, all of the same typology and clear votive function.
Kore - Brown University
A kore (pl. korai) is a standing Archaic stone statue (typically in marble or limestone) of a draped, unmarried female figure. Usually these statues were life-size. With the development of the korai, Greek sculpture started to become more “monumental” (Whitley 198).
Kore – Ancient-Greece.org
Kore (κόρη = maiden. Plural: κόραι, korai) refers to statues depicting female figures, always of a young age, which were created during the Ancient Greek Archaic period (600 – 480 BCE) either as votive or commemorative statues.
Greek Art & Architecture: Archaic Kore Statues
The female counterpart of the kouros is the kore, the draped standing female figure. The kore explores the relationship between garment and body, moving from complete obscuring of anatomy through hints of the body beneath, to daring revelations of …