Kallistratos (sculptor)

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Kallistratos ( ancient Greek Καλλίστρατος ) was an ancient Greek ore caster who lived around the middle of the 2nd century BC. Was active.

No known works by Kallistratos have come down to us. It owes its position as part of the art history of a mention in Pliny the Elder , who it together with Antaeus , Polycles from Athens , Kalli Xenos , Pythokles , Pythias and Timocles as a significant artist of the 156th Olympiad ansetzte (156-153 v. Chr.). During this time, after a phase of decline, their works are said to have helped art to find new ways and flourish, in particular they are said to have given ore casting a new lease of life after a weaker phase. They should no longer have reached the level of the earlier high phases, but still have created respectable works of artistic value. Pliny does not explain exactly where the artistic boom of the works lies. From the context, however, it can be concluded that it was evidently a group of artisans, possibly based in Rome, from whom a new classical movement of Hellenistic art originated. In making this assessment, Pliny follows a different, Hellenistic source. These names form the end of Pliny 's chronological listing of the important sculptors and ore founders. As is customary with Pliny, the order also reflects a qualitative evaluation, starting with the best and ending with the supposedly weakest of these ore caster. Kallistratos was in second place, making it the second best representative of this group.

Unlike most of the other representatives from Pliny’s group, Kallistratos is also mentioned separately in another place. According to Tatian , he made a statue of the Charite Euanthe .

literature

Remarks

  1. Pliny: Naturalis historia. 34, 52
  2. Tatianos: Oratio ad Graecos (speech to the Greeks). 34