First he considers architecture, looking at Lydian skills with masonry, Greek ingenuity in creating 'orders' of stone architecture and appropriate patterns, and other practices over much of the ancient east, together with Egyptian and Mesopotamian elements. He then investigates sculpture, which remains essentially Oriental in nature but carries Greek patterning.
The new monumental styles remained unchanged throughout the period of empire but were confined mainly to Persia itself. Outside Persia, idioms were devised for the arts (including metalwork and seal-engraving) which blended local traditions with Persian motifs and aspirations.
The Achaemenid Persian experiment in art and architecture was unique in antiquity, but lasted only as long as the empire itself. Alexander the Great brought about its fall, yet it continued to influence arts from Greece to India, despite its own heterogeneous origins. For orientalists and classicists alike, this is a record of the brilliant evolution of an artificial yet unified style, unmatched in the history of the art and archaeology of the Old World.
Sir John Boardman was born in 1927, and educated at Chigwell School and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He spent several years in Greece, three of them as Assistant Director of the British School of Archaeology at Athens, and he has excavated in Smyrna, Crete, Chios and Libya. For four years he was an Assistant Keeper in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and he subsequently became Reader in Classical Archaeology and Fellow of Merton College, Oxford. He is now Lincoln Professor Emeritus of Classical Archaeology and Art in Oxford, and a Fellow of the British Academy, from whom he received the Kenyon Medal in 1995. He was awarded the Onassis Prize for Humanities in 2009. Professor Boardman has written widely on the art and archaeology of Ancient Greece.
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