"Who am I? Why am I here?" |
This week has brought a flood of enquiries about caryatids resulting from the photos from the tomb near Amphipolis. What are caryatids and why should the relatives of a rich dead Macedonian choose caryatids to hold up a lintel on the tomb?
Persian Bull |
Figures of animals and humans had been used earlier by Egyptian and Persian architects to support imperial roofs. I personally would rather have a bull on my tomb, please, like this one from Darius' building project at Susa, than a caryatid. When Persian art used human figures to do load-bearing work, they were people who had been subjected to the Persian empire.
Down-at-heel Caryatids at home in Karyes |
Caryatids
take their name from the town of Karyai (now Karyes), in the central Peloponnese, which
featured a sanctuary and famous statue of Artemis. Karyai means Nuts, or sometimes
specifically walnuts or hazelnuts. A Karyatis (plural Karyatides) means 'maiden dancing the nut-tree dance' or a 'nut-tree
priestess'. They did a special
dance for Artemis with baskets of nuts on their heads, which may have given an architect the
idea to put roofs on their heads instead. But you can dance with a basket on
your head. A temple roof is a different matter.
The
Roman architect Vitruvius said the origin of the caryatids was much more
tragic. The people of Karyai had treacherously sided with the Persians when
they invaded. So after the war the other Greeks punished them by executing the
men and enslaving the women. The Women of Karyai are not dancing maidens but
matrons, he says, doomed to perpetual labour and unfreedom.
Artemis
is often associated with death rites and mysteries, which might illuminate her priestesses' presence in funerary art. The most famous caryatids are those in the porch
of the Athenian Erectheion, the shrine housing the dead hero-king Erechtheus (five
are in Athens; one stands in lonely isolation from her sisters far away in the
British Museum). They have inspired countless imitations and adaptations the
world over from ancient times, often rather uncomfortably expressing pride in
imperialist ventures.
Hans Walther's sad Caryatids, Oppressed by Capital, in Erfurt |
My
own favourite are the saddest of all. Their hunched bodies support the entire weight
of the capital accumulated in the Savings Bank in Erfurt, central Germany. They are the work of the sculptor Hans Walther,
in the idiom of the ‘New Objectivity’ or ‘New Resignation’ (Neue Sachlichkeit) which
had been developed in the Weimar Republic: Erfurt is only a few kilometres from
Weimar itself. One well-fed capitalist on the left feeds himself from his
well-loaded plate, while the other worker–women and men, young and old, are
dejected, worn down, and hungry.
So
are the new Amphipolis caryatids joyous maidens performing a dance in celebration
of the nut harvest, enslaved traitors of their nation, symbols of Macedonian
imperialism, ostentation and greed, or simply conventional stone guardians of
the dead available for commission in any ancient funeral parlour? This is what makes antiquity fun: it's up to each one of us to decide.
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