Acropolis - Parthenon

Abstract

The sublime entablature and sculpture of the Parthenon's pediment and frieze.

Description

Here we can see the resolution of what Trachtenberg refers to as the "angle problem." This is briefly explained here, in Trachtenberg's own words: "The "angle problem" has to do with the unsightly stretching of the last metope in the frieze of a Doric temple, as the last triglyph became displaced outward from the center of the corner column to the corner itself in order to accomodate the increasing dimensions of column and architrave. The problem was solved by "angle-contraction," or simply narrowing the spacing between the corner columns for the required distance, which, as it turned out, contributed to the visual integrity of the temple by lending added solidity to the corner. Thus a virtue was made of necessity. But the Parthenon went further: Its contraction of the corner interaxial distance is double the amount necessary to correct the irregularity in the frieze. This introduced a new reverse irregularity in the frieze (the last metope would now be too narrow) which was compensated for by progressively narrowing the metopes from the corner to the center bay" (91).

References

Trachtenberg, Marvin, and Isabelle Hyman. "Architecture, from Prehistory to Post-modernism: The Western Tradition." New York: Prentice-Hall, H.N. Abrams, 1986.

Image Notes

Photograph created August 8th, 1958. Processing date unknown. Formerly catalogued as B22.014. Notes written on the slide or index: Parthenon E. Pediment.

Identifier W.014
Location Athens, Greece
Year 1958
Keywords Acropolis,
Written Date August 8th, 1958
Slide Notes Parthenon E. Pediment
Index Notes Parthenon
General Location Athens