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HISTORY
                       OF
INTERIOR DESIGN - I

                                                           1



Ar. S.H.R.Jawahar Benazir
School of Architecture & Interior Design, SRM University
INTERIORS
        DURING
GREEK PERIOD
                                 2




History of Interior Design - I
Map
                 of
               Ancient
               Greece


                         3




Greek Period
ANCIENT GREECE
• Greek culture can be said to have begun with the Bronze Age civilization of the
  Minoans in Crete.
• The Minoans built vast palaces, and were skilled in metalwork, pottery, artwork
  and the crafting of jewelry.
• Civilization on the Greek mainland followed closely behind that of Crete, and
  Greece soon became the cultural center of the ancient world.
• Ancient Greek civilization was at its zenith during the Classical era, from 499 BC
  to 79 BC.
• The early Greeks were encouraged to be great thinkers and philosophers. Their
  scientists and mathematicians laid the groundwork that made today's scientific
  discoveries possible.
• They loved to gather together to discuss concepts, ideas, religion and politics,
                                                                                       4
  spending much time in the agora (marketplace) in conversation and argument.
• Ancient Greeks were great lovers of beauty, art, literature and drama, and
  enjoyed listening to stories, fables and legends.
                            Greek Period
ANC IE NT G R E E K F UR NIT UR E
• The Greek history of furniture can be traced back to the heritage of Egyptian
  furniture.
• The earliest Greek civilizations borrowed styles and ideas from Egypt, but by the
  Classical era, designs had subtly changed to a style that was uniquely Greek.
• Lines became softer, much use was made of subtle and elegant curves, and more
  attention was given to comfort.
• Although almost no furniture has survived the centuries, Greek artwork such as
  pottery decorations and friezes depict daily Greek life in Greek homes, and this
  has given us an accurate idea of early Greek furniture designs.
• Early Greek furniture was largely influenced from furniture crafted by the
  Egyptians.
• Unlike Egypt, Greece had enough timber for furniture making.
• Paintings created during that era depict furniture as unbending and rectangular.    5

• Furniture found during the classical Greek era differed little from that of early
  Greek furniture.
                            Greek Period
• Modern life in Western civilization has many of its roots and background in
  ancient Greece. Much of ancient Greek culture such as drama, art, architecture,
  literature, mythology, and the Olympic games all began in one small country in
  Europe.
• Yet there is another aspect of Greek life affecting culture today that is often
  overlooked: furniture.
• No indoor ancient Greek furniture has survived to present day due to the fact
  that it was entirely made of wood.
• The examples of the furniture that we see today in vase paintings, sculptures,
  and reliefs from the Parthenon are considered by historians to be valid.
• Yet, these are but artists depictions of what furniture was.
• The only surviving furniture was used in outdoor plays, and is believed to ill-
  represent the common furniture of the people.
                                                                                    6




                            Greek Period
T HE C ONFIG UR AT I O N OF G R E E K F UR NIT UR E
• So much wealth in the form of precious
  metals like gold, bronze etc were
  lavished in typical Greek furniture.
• The Greeks took time to configure some
  complicated designs of furniture and
  this made their technology in furniture
  outstanding.
                                                           Couches for dining halls
•   For example, the ancient Greek couch was used for resting as well as for eating. It
    was constructed with the horizontal reclining area at table height, rather than low
    and at an incline.
•   The headrest was often curved to support pillows and no foot rest was used.
•   Their stools were built in a variety of configurations and the legs were mostly built   7
    in trumpet form or a rectangular design based on a columnar form.
•   There were the folding stools with X-shaped legs and stationary stools with
    straight legs which were made.
                                Greek Period
STYLES
• Greek furniture styles were simple, elegant and tasteful. Although carving and
  inlays were used, furniture was not over-decorated.
• Houses were not cluttered with much furniture, and household items were made
  for use and comfort rather than decoration.
• However, the Greek love of beauty and art extended to furniture design, and the
  few simple items of furniture in an early Greek household were often works of
  art in their own right.
• Oak, maple, beech, citrus and willow were the main woods which did not
  require any veneering technique.
• Marble and bronze were used in conjunction with or to replace wood, and laid
  ivory, ebony, and precious stones were lavished on the finest wooden pieces,
  which sometimes had feet of silver.
• Carved and painted decoration was almost commonplace in this rich market.         8

• Sears were fitted with perfumed and brightly coloured cushions.

                            Greek Period
T Y P E S OF F UR NIT UR E
• Elegant interiors with marble columns, stucco ceilings and mosaic floors, are
  portrayed in frescoes and marble carvings.
• From the 7th century BCE to 4th century BCE, there were 5 main types of
  furniture : stools, couches, small tables, chests, and chairs.
• The early kinds of ancient Greek furniture were predominantly influenced by
  Egyptian furniture. Characteristic of this early furniture was a stiff,
  rectangular, and unflattering shape.




                                                                                  9




                           Greek Period
Pompeii wall painting depicting
women and luxury textiles
                                       Woman             putting
covering the seat.
                                       valuables into chests

                                                                   10




                        Greek Period
ST OOL S
• Two main styles of stools of ancient Greece have
  survived through reliefs.
• The first type looks more like a small table. The
  typical stool consisted of a flat top and four straight
  legs. This stool was known as a Bathron.
• There was no back support and the bottom was hard
  and uncompromising.
                                                    Stool &small table
                                                           A women holding a
                                                           basket (situla). Behind
                                                           her a stool with a woven
                                                           cushion.
                                                                                      11




                              Greek Period
• The second type of stool was made lightweight and
  easy to carry-the X stool.
• The X-stool, also known as the diphros okladias,
  was easily movable and did not have a specific
  place in the home. It consisted of three animal legs
  pointed inwards and ending with lion's paws.
• These were used both indoors and outdoors.
• When masters went out to stroll in the streets, the
  diphoros okladias was carried by a servant so that
  it would be ready immediately whenever he might        “Diphros Okladias”
  wish to rest.                                          X-frame style
• Some of these were greatly decorated and used as backless thrones outdoor in
  similar manner.                                                                 12
• X-framed stools enjoyed both popular and official status, the straight legged
  version (sella curilis) being used by magistrates.

                              Greek Period
• The third type of stool, the Thronos or throne, was a type of stool known only to
  the wealthy. The Thronos was ornately decorated and was often times lined with
  precious stones.
• The thronos or throne-chair, was always reserved for the use of the most
  important person present. Often a god was depicted on a throne which was
  carved with ram’s heads at the ends of the arms or whose back was shaped like a
  snake or a horse’s head.
• The footstool, which was used for access to couches and other high furniture,
  was known as the Theyns.




                                                                                      13




                               Greek Period
COUCHES - KLINES
• Greek Kline- The Greeks followed the
  Eastern tradition of lying down to eat.
• The couches, known as klines, had a
  headboard that could be used as a
  backrest while sitting, and were elegantly
  upholstered.
• They were made entirely of wood, but often had bronze legs
  cast in animal styles.
• The klines were placed around the walls, and small tables
  were placed next to them to hold the food and drink.
• Kline from klino (cause to lean), from which also the word
  clinic and clinical is derived (that on which one reclines).
• It was made of wood or bronze, and was often richly                         14
                                                                 Decoration
  adorned.
                                                                 of a kline

                             Greek Period
CHE STS
• Various types and sizes of chests were used for
  storage.
• These usually had gabled lids and some painted with
  flowers and figures or elaborately decorated with inlay
  and bronze or silver mounts.
• Chests were prized pieces of furniture, and would
  often be passed down from one generation to another.    Woman            putting
• Chests were originally made similar to those of the valuables into chests
  Egyptian style and then took on their own style.
• Chests were the only means for storing clothing because
  shelves were generally not used for that purpose.
• Jewelry, Valuables and fruits were hidden alongside the
  clothing for protection.                                                       15
• Chests were also often valued enough to be part of a
  wife's dowry into use in the Hellenistic period          Woman putting
• Some of the chests made of wood were used as coffins.    clothes into a chest
                           Greek Period
BEDS
• Greek furniture was treated architecturally.
• Beds usually had the appearance of Greek temples and
  usually were made of stone.




                                                         16




                          Greek Period
C H AI R S                                                       The Hard
• Prior to the invention of a type of chair known as the Klismos stiff back
  by the Greeks in the 5th Century BCE, chairs were the same as  Chair
  those of Egypt and Persian.
• These chairs had hard stiff backs and arms. Even the people
  depicted in paintings and friezes sitting in these types of chairs
  look to be uncomfortable.
• Rather than being designed to be comfortable, these chairs of the 6th and 7th
  Centuries BCE were purely ceremonial in nature.
• The 5th Century BCE brought along a new era in Greek chairs and furniture.
• The Klismos was an entirely new type of chair designed by the      The Klismos
  Greeks. It's smooth and flowing shape inspired cultures of the
  Middle Ages and the early 19th Century to revive the concept.
• The Klismos, used principally by women, was made with                            17

  delicately curved back and legs.

                           Greek Period
Klismos chair • These features allowed the sitter to be in a freer and
                            more natural position; the backs of these chairs,
                            referred to as Stiles, were designed to the curvature
                            of the back for comfort and extended to the shoulders.
                          • The Klismos, like most other furniture, was made of
                            wood and not ornately decorated.
                          • In order to increase the comfort, cushions and animal
                            skins were usually placed on the Klismos.
                          • By Hellenistic times, the general shape and structure
Klismos - The backs of of the Klismos had already started to change.
these chairs, referred to • Chairs once again became heavier and more rigid.
as Stiles, were designed • The general concept of comfort over ceremony has
to the curvature of the luckily survived through these changes so that a piece
back for comfort and of furniture from 2500 years ago does not seem at all           18
extended       to     the strange today.
shoulders. Used mainly
by women.
                             Greek Period
COUCHES
• Couches of ancient Greece were
  combinations of beds and sofas. This type
  of furniture, called the Kline, was made for
  sleeping as well as dining.
• During meals Greek diners would lie down rather
  than sit to eat. The Greek tend to recline rather than
  sit originated in the 6th century.
• Greek couches were similar to those of the
  Egyptians except for two differences.
• They stood higher off the ground, so much that a
  footstool was sometimes used as a means of
                                                         Sometimes a kline was used
  access; and second, there was a headboard but no
                                                         even on a horse
  footboard.                                                                      19

• The height allowed for easier access to tables and also allowed room beneath to
  fit tables. The headboard was used as a means of back support while eating.
                           Greek Period
T AB L E S
• A common wood type table was rectangular and stood
  on three legs. There were two legs at one end, the third
  being in the centre of the other end.
• The Greeks had one set item to be placed upon their
  tables: food; The ancient Greeks did not use tables as
  places to set up trinkets or valuables, but merely used
  them in their most basic purpose.
• Tables were low and mostly movable, credences and
  drinking tables being often three-legged and made of
  bronze.
• Most ancient tables, were made with 3 rather than 4
  legs to create a better sense of balance.
• These tables could be made of bronze or marble, but                          20
  typically of wood. This type of table was the most table with lion form legs
  common up until the 4th Century BCE when square
  topped tables were replaced with round tops.
                          Greek Period
AD D I T I O N AL F U R N I S H I N G S
• The previously mentioned furnishings were usually the bare essentials for
  a family living in ancient Greece.
• There are also other furnishings which were less useful and more
  decorative. These, of course, belonged to the wealthy.
• Wealthy Greeks enjoyed the luxuries of incense burners, vases, and large
  vases known as Lebeti as a part of daily life.
                                                              incense burner
• LEBETI - he vases of the wealthy were decorative and were often
  times made of precious or semi-precious metals. These vases,
  along with Lebeti, were made by highly skilled workers and were
  often times ornately decorated.
• Lebeti were "elegant nuptial vases of eighteen inches high and
  minutely decorated with stories from history or legend...“                   21

• Lebeti, in addition to their decorative purpose, were used as water
  jugs and large bowls.
                             Greek Period
Marble Table – typical three
                                       legged with a Round top


A chair designed for small children.
Baby on Stool with Mother
                                                                      22

Marble Table – Supported on a
single Leg – Animal faced leg
                        Greek Period
G R E E K HOUSE S
• The Greek house consist of two parts:
      The northern house and
      The southern house.
• The northern house begins with a single large room, "the great hall," then lesser
  rooms are added to it. It gets its light from windows in the outer walls, and it is
  covered by a single steep roof.
• The southern (Greek and Oriental) house is a building with all rooms arranged
  around a rectangular court. The rooms, many or few, get their light from this
  court, while they are quite shut off from the world outside. All in all, for warm
  climates this style of house is far more airy, cool and comfortable than the other.
  The wide open court becomes the living room of the house during the hot seasons.

                                                                                        23




                             Greek Period
Houses in ancient Athens
                                     24




                      Greek Period
View




Houses in ancient Athens
               Plan                    25




                      Greek Period
P L AN OF A G R E E K HOUSE
• The plan of a Greek house naturally varies infinitely according to the size of the
  land plot, the size of the owner's family, his own taste, and wealth.
• It will usually be rectangular, with the narrower side toward the street; but this is
  not invariable.
• In the larger houses there will be two courts (aule), one behind the other, and
  each with its own circuit of dependent chambers.
  AN D R O N I T I S
• The court first entered will be the Andronitis (the Court of the Men), and may
  be even large enough to afford a considerable promenade for exercise.
• Around the whole of the open space run lines of simple columns, and above the
  opening swings an awning if the day is very hot.
• In the very center rises a small stone alter with a statue of Zeus the Protector        26

  (Zeus Herkeios), where the father of the family will from time to time offer
  sacrifice, acting as the priest for the household.
                              Greek Period
• This is where the family spent most of its time, and only when guests appeared
  would the women disappear to their own quarters.
• In summer, the family would eat in the andronitis, and would gather to tell and
  listen to stories in the evenings. In the center a small shrine to Zeus was normally
  found.
• In fine weather, the women of the family would spin, weave and sew here, listening
  to the men discussing the latest ideas gleaned from the Agora.
• The Andronitis is the true living room of the house: here the master will receive
  his visitors, and only the male slaves work here.
• The decoration is very plain: the walls are neatly tinted with some kind of wash;
  the floor is of simple plaster, or, in a humbler house, common earth pounded hard.
• Under the colonnade at all four sides open the various chambers, possibly twelve
  in all. They really are cells or compartments rather than rooms, small and usually
  lighted only by their doors.                                                           27

• Some are used for storerooms, some for sleeping closets for the male slaves and
  for the grown-up sons of the house, if there are any.
                               Greek Period
AN D R O N
• Leading from the andronitis was the andron, or men's dining room - probably the
  most pretentious room in the house.
• This is where male guests were entertained to symposia - dinner parties and
  convivial evenings companionably spent over an amphora or two of wine.
• In one corner is the family hearth, once the real fire for the whole household
  cooking, but now merely a symbol of the domestic worship.
• It is simply a little round alter sacred to Hestia, the hearth goddess, who
  corresponds to the Roman goddess Vesta, and on its duly rekindled flame little
  "meat offerings and drink offerings" are cast at every meal, humble or elaborate.
• Women were strictly excluded from these festivities.
• The andron was likely to be the most elaborate room in the house, often having a
  mosaic floor and luxurious decor.
• In the rear wall of the Andron facing the Andronitis is a solid door.                 28

• Only the father, sons, or near male kinsmen of the family are allowed to go inside,
  for it leads into the Gyneconitis, the hall of the women.
                             Greek Period
G YN E C O N I T I S
• The women are forbidden to participate in so much of public life that their own
  peculiar world is especially reserved to them.
• Male guests to houses were allowed no further than the andron; beyond this were
  the women's quarters.
• The Gynæconitis, or Hall of the Women, was a second colonnaded
  courtyard, with its own set of rooms leading from it.
• These would include the kitchen, possibly a bathroom, more storage rooms, and
  small sleeping chambers for the female slaves.
  T H AL A M O S
• Leading from this, or possibly on a second storey, would be the thalamos - the
  master bedroom belonging to the master and mistress of the house.
• Some houses contained a second large bedroom, known as the ante-thalamos,         29
  for the daughters of the house.
• The most precious possessions and ornaments of the family, as well as the best
  furniture, would be kept in the thalamos.
                            Greek Period
• One of the rooms in the very rear is the kitchen;
• Others are the sleeping closets of the slave women.
• Another special room is set apart for the working of wool, although this chief
  occupation of the female part of the household is likely to be carried on in the
  open inner court itself, if the weather is fine.
F UR NISHI NG S OF A G R E E K HOUSE
• These houses, even owned by the lordly rich, are surprisingly simple in their
  furnishings.
• The furniture includes - Beds, couches, chairs (usually backless), stools,
  footstools, and small portable tables.
• Huge chests, heavy and carved, in which most of the household could be locked
  away were the main storage furniture.
• Oriental carpets are often used as wall draperies or couch covers rather than      30
  upon the floors.
• There was a very simple wardrobe – or a chest of drawers for the storage of
  clothes.
                            Greek Period
• There is a marked absence of heavy and unhealthful upholstery; but the simple
  bed - four posts with cushion stuffed with feathers or wool has its woodwork
  adorned with carving.
• On festival days the house will be hung with brilliant and elaborately wrought
  tapestries usually kept in the great chests.
• The whole bed is given an elegant effect by the magnificently embroidered
  scarlet tapestry which overspreads it.
• Moreover, the different household vessels, the stone and bronze lamps, the
  various table dishes, even the common pottery put to the humblest uses, all have
  a beauty, a chaste elegance, a saving touch of deft ornamentation, which
  transforms them out of "kitchen ware" into works of art.
• Those black water pots covered with red-clay figures are simple but supremely
  beautiful.
                                                                                     31




                             Greek Period
• In conclusion, it is easy to see the effect that ancient Greeks furnished their
  houses with five main types of furniture in ancient Greece which were made for
  practicality then, and have continued to serve their purpose to this day.
• The stools, couches, tables, chests, and chairs of the Greeks are merely more
  additions to the grand assortment of Greek items and ideas that have had an
  immense influence on Western life today.
• Furniture is easier to carry than sculptures.
• The only complete surviving piece of wooden classical Greek furniture was found
  far from Greece, in an Egyptian tomb. And Rome also must have imported Greek
  furniture.
• An impressive and influential stone throne exists in three identical versions this
  is a marble throne in S. Giorgorio Magno, Rome decorated with winged lions and
  acanthus scrolls.
                                                                                       32




                             Greek Period

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History of Interior Design - Ancient Greek Interiors

  • 1. HISTORY OF INTERIOR DESIGN - I 1 Ar. S.H.R.Jawahar Benazir School of Architecture & Interior Design, SRM University
  • 2. INTERIORS DURING GREEK PERIOD 2 History of Interior Design - I
  • 3. Map of Ancient Greece 3 Greek Period
  • 4. ANCIENT GREECE • Greek culture can be said to have begun with the Bronze Age civilization of the Minoans in Crete. • The Minoans built vast palaces, and were skilled in metalwork, pottery, artwork and the crafting of jewelry. • Civilization on the Greek mainland followed closely behind that of Crete, and Greece soon became the cultural center of the ancient world. • Ancient Greek civilization was at its zenith during the Classical era, from 499 BC to 79 BC. • The early Greeks were encouraged to be great thinkers and philosophers. Their scientists and mathematicians laid the groundwork that made today's scientific discoveries possible. • They loved to gather together to discuss concepts, ideas, religion and politics, 4 spending much time in the agora (marketplace) in conversation and argument. • Ancient Greeks were great lovers of beauty, art, literature and drama, and enjoyed listening to stories, fables and legends. Greek Period
  • 5. ANC IE NT G R E E K F UR NIT UR E • The Greek history of furniture can be traced back to the heritage of Egyptian furniture. • The earliest Greek civilizations borrowed styles and ideas from Egypt, but by the Classical era, designs had subtly changed to a style that was uniquely Greek. • Lines became softer, much use was made of subtle and elegant curves, and more attention was given to comfort. • Although almost no furniture has survived the centuries, Greek artwork such as pottery decorations and friezes depict daily Greek life in Greek homes, and this has given us an accurate idea of early Greek furniture designs. • Early Greek furniture was largely influenced from furniture crafted by the Egyptians. • Unlike Egypt, Greece had enough timber for furniture making. • Paintings created during that era depict furniture as unbending and rectangular. 5 • Furniture found during the classical Greek era differed little from that of early Greek furniture. Greek Period
  • 6. • Modern life in Western civilization has many of its roots and background in ancient Greece. Much of ancient Greek culture such as drama, art, architecture, literature, mythology, and the Olympic games all began in one small country in Europe. • Yet there is another aspect of Greek life affecting culture today that is often overlooked: furniture. • No indoor ancient Greek furniture has survived to present day due to the fact that it was entirely made of wood. • The examples of the furniture that we see today in vase paintings, sculptures, and reliefs from the Parthenon are considered by historians to be valid. • Yet, these are but artists depictions of what furniture was. • The only surviving furniture was used in outdoor plays, and is believed to ill- represent the common furniture of the people. 6 Greek Period
  • 7. T HE C ONFIG UR AT I O N OF G R E E K F UR NIT UR E • So much wealth in the form of precious metals like gold, bronze etc were lavished in typical Greek furniture. • The Greeks took time to configure some complicated designs of furniture and this made their technology in furniture outstanding. Couches for dining halls • For example, the ancient Greek couch was used for resting as well as for eating. It was constructed with the horizontal reclining area at table height, rather than low and at an incline. • The headrest was often curved to support pillows and no foot rest was used. • Their stools were built in a variety of configurations and the legs were mostly built 7 in trumpet form or a rectangular design based on a columnar form. • There were the folding stools with X-shaped legs and stationary stools with straight legs which were made. Greek Period
  • 8. STYLES • Greek furniture styles were simple, elegant and tasteful. Although carving and inlays were used, furniture was not over-decorated. • Houses were not cluttered with much furniture, and household items were made for use and comfort rather than decoration. • However, the Greek love of beauty and art extended to furniture design, and the few simple items of furniture in an early Greek household were often works of art in their own right. • Oak, maple, beech, citrus and willow were the main woods which did not require any veneering technique. • Marble and bronze were used in conjunction with or to replace wood, and laid ivory, ebony, and precious stones were lavished on the finest wooden pieces, which sometimes had feet of silver. • Carved and painted decoration was almost commonplace in this rich market. 8 • Sears were fitted with perfumed and brightly coloured cushions. Greek Period
  • 9. T Y P E S OF F UR NIT UR E • Elegant interiors with marble columns, stucco ceilings and mosaic floors, are portrayed in frescoes and marble carvings. • From the 7th century BCE to 4th century BCE, there were 5 main types of furniture : stools, couches, small tables, chests, and chairs. • The early kinds of ancient Greek furniture were predominantly influenced by Egyptian furniture. Characteristic of this early furniture was a stiff, rectangular, and unflattering shape. 9 Greek Period
  • 10. Pompeii wall painting depicting women and luxury textiles Woman putting covering the seat. valuables into chests 10 Greek Period
  • 11. ST OOL S • Two main styles of stools of ancient Greece have survived through reliefs. • The first type looks more like a small table. The typical stool consisted of a flat top and four straight legs. This stool was known as a Bathron. • There was no back support and the bottom was hard and uncompromising. Stool &small table A women holding a basket (situla). Behind her a stool with a woven cushion. 11 Greek Period
  • 12. • The second type of stool was made lightweight and easy to carry-the X stool. • The X-stool, also known as the diphros okladias, was easily movable and did not have a specific place in the home. It consisted of three animal legs pointed inwards and ending with lion's paws. • These were used both indoors and outdoors. • When masters went out to stroll in the streets, the diphoros okladias was carried by a servant so that it would be ready immediately whenever he might “Diphros Okladias” wish to rest. X-frame style • Some of these were greatly decorated and used as backless thrones outdoor in similar manner. 12 • X-framed stools enjoyed both popular and official status, the straight legged version (sella curilis) being used by magistrates. Greek Period
  • 13. • The third type of stool, the Thronos or throne, was a type of stool known only to the wealthy. The Thronos was ornately decorated and was often times lined with precious stones. • The thronos or throne-chair, was always reserved for the use of the most important person present. Often a god was depicted on a throne which was carved with ram’s heads at the ends of the arms or whose back was shaped like a snake or a horse’s head. • The footstool, which was used for access to couches and other high furniture, was known as the Theyns. 13 Greek Period
  • 14. COUCHES - KLINES • Greek Kline- The Greeks followed the Eastern tradition of lying down to eat. • The couches, known as klines, had a headboard that could be used as a backrest while sitting, and were elegantly upholstered. • They were made entirely of wood, but often had bronze legs cast in animal styles. • The klines were placed around the walls, and small tables were placed next to them to hold the food and drink. • Kline from klino (cause to lean), from which also the word clinic and clinical is derived (that on which one reclines). • It was made of wood or bronze, and was often richly 14 Decoration adorned. of a kline Greek Period
  • 15. CHE STS • Various types and sizes of chests were used for storage. • These usually had gabled lids and some painted with flowers and figures or elaborately decorated with inlay and bronze or silver mounts. • Chests were prized pieces of furniture, and would often be passed down from one generation to another. Woman putting • Chests were originally made similar to those of the valuables into chests Egyptian style and then took on their own style. • Chests were the only means for storing clothing because shelves were generally not used for that purpose. • Jewelry, Valuables and fruits were hidden alongside the clothing for protection. 15 • Chests were also often valued enough to be part of a wife's dowry into use in the Hellenistic period Woman putting • Some of the chests made of wood were used as coffins. clothes into a chest Greek Period
  • 16. BEDS • Greek furniture was treated architecturally. • Beds usually had the appearance of Greek temples and usually were made of stone. 16 Greek Period
  • 17. C H AI R S The Hard • Prior to the invention of a type of chair known as the Klismos stiff back by the Greeks in the 5th Century BCE, chairs were the same as Chair those of Egypt and Persian. • These chairs had hard stiff backs and arms. Even the people depicted in paintings and friezes sitting in these types of chairs look to be uncomfortable. • Rather than being designed to be comfortable, these chairs of the 6th and 7th Centuries BCE were purely ceremonial in nature. • The 5th Century BCE brought along a new era in Greek chairs and furniture. • The Klismos was an entirely new type of chair designed by the The Klismos Greeks. It's smooth and flowing shape inspired cultures of the Middle Ages and the early 19th Century to revive the concept. • The Klismos, used principally by women, was made with 17 delicately curved back and legs. Greek Period
  • 18. Klismos chair • These features allowed the sitter to be in a freer and more natural position; the backs of these chairs, referred to as Stiles, were designed to the curvature of the back for comfort and extended to the shoulders. • The Klismos, like most other furniture, was made of wood and not ornately decorated. • In order to increase the comfort, cushions and animal skins were usually placed on the Klismos. • By Hellenistic times, the general shape and structure Klismos - The backs of of the Klismos had already started to change. these chairs, referred to • Chairs once again became heavier and more rigid. as Stiles, were designed • The general concept of comfort over ceremony has to the curvature of the luckily survived through these changes so that a piece back for comfort and of furniture from 2500 years ago does not seem at all 18 extended to the strange today. shoulders. Used mainly by women. Greek Period
  • 19. COUCHES • Couches of ancient Greece were combinations of beds and sofas. This type of furniture, called the Kline, was made for sleeping as well as dining. • During meals Greek diners would lie down rather than sit to eat. The Greek tend to recline rather than sit originated in the 6th century. • Greek couches were similar to those of the Egyptians except for two differences. • They stood higher off the ground, so much that a footstool was sometimes used as a means of Sometimes a kline was used access; and second, there was a headboard but no even on a horse footboard. 19 • The height allowed for easier access to tables and also allowed room beneath to fit tables. The headboard was used as a means of back support while eating. Greek Period
  • 20. T AB L E S • A common wood type table was rectangular and stood on three legs. There were two legs at one end, the third being in the centre of the other end. • The Greeks had one set item to be placed upon their tables: food; The ancient Greeks did not use tables as places to set up trinkets or valuables, but merely used them in their most basic purpose. • Tables were low and mostly movable, credences and drinking tables being often three-legged and made of bronze. • Most ancient tables, were made with 3 rather than 4 legs to create a better sense of balance. • These tables could be made of bronze or marble, but 20 typically of wood. This type of table was the most table with lion form legs common up until the 4th Century BCE when square topped tables were replaced with round tops. Greek Period
  • 21. AD D I T I O N AL F U R N I S H I N G S • The previously mentioned furnishings were usually the bare essentials for a family living in ancient Greece. • There are also other furnishings which were less useful and more decorative. These, of course, belonged to the wealthy. • Wealthy Greeks enjoyed the luxuries of incense burners, vases, and large vases known as Lebeti as a part of daily life. incense burner • LEBETI - he vases of the wealthy were decorative and were often times made of precious or semi-precious metals. These vases, along with Lebeti, were made by highly skilled workers and were often times ornately decorated. • Lebeti were "elegant nuptial vases of eighteen inches high and minutely decorated with stories from history or legend...“ 21 • Lebeti, in addition to their decorative purpose, were used as water jugs and large bowls. Greek Period
  • 22. Marble Table – typical three legged with a Round top A chair designed for small children. Baby on Stool with Mother 22 Marble Table – Supported on a single Leg – Animal faced leg Greek Period
  • 23. G R E E K HOUSE S • The Greek house consist of two parts:  The northern house and  The southern house. • The northern house begins with a single large room, "the great hall," then lesser rooms are added to it. It gets its light from windows in the outer walls, and it is covered by a single steep roof. • The southern (Greek and Oriental) house is a building with all rooms arranged around a rectangular court. The rooms, many or few, get their light from this court, while they are quite shut off from the world outside. All in all, for warm climates this style of house is far more airy, cool and comfortable than the other. The wide open court becomes the living room of the house during the hot seasons. 23 Greek Period
  • 24. Houses in ancient Athens 24 Greek Period
  • 25. View Houses in ancient Athens Plan 25 Greek Period
  • 26. P L AN OF A G R E E K HOUSE • The plan of a Greek house naturally varies infinitely according to the size of the land plot, the size of the owner's family, his own taste, and wealth. • It will usually be rectangular, with the narrower side toward the street; but this is not invariable. • In the larger houses there will be two courts (aule), one behind the other, and each with its own circuit of dependent chambers. AN D R O N I T I S • The court first entered will be the Andronitis (the Court of the Men), and may be even large enough to afford a considerable promenade for exercise. • Around the whole of the open space run lines of simple columns, and above the opening swings an awning if the day is very hot. • In the very center rises a small stone alter with a statue of Zeus the Protector 26 (Zeus Herkeios), where the father of the family will from time to time offer sacrifice, acting as the priest for the household. Greek Period
  • 27. • This is where the family spent most of its time, and only when guests appeared would the women disappear to their own quarters. • In summer, the family would eat in the andronitis, and would gather to tell and listen to stories in the evenings. In the center a small shrine to Zeus was normally found. • In fine weather, the women of the family would spin, weave and sew here, listening to the men discussing the latest ideas gleaned from the Agora. • The Andronitis is the true living room of the house: here the master will receive his visitors, and only the male slaves work here. • The decoration is very plain: the walls are neatly tinted with some kind of wash; the floor is of simple plaster, or, in a humbler house, common earth pounded hard. • Under the colonnade at all four sides open the various chambers, possibly twelve in all. They really are cells or compartments rather than rooms, small and usually lighted only by their doors. 27 • Some are used for storerooms, some for sleeping closets for the male slaves and for the grown-up sons of the house, if there are any. Greek Period
  • 28. AN D R O N • Leading from the andronitis was the andron, or men's dining room - probably the most pretentious room in the house. • This is where male guests were entertained to symposia - dinner parties and convivial evenings companionably spent over an amphora or two of wine. • In one corner is the family hearth, once the real fire for the whole household cooking, but now merely a symbol of the domestic worship. • It is simply a little round alter sacred to Hestia, the hearth goddess, who corresponds to the Roman goddess Vesta, and on its duly rekindled flame little "meat offerings and drink offerings" are cast at every meal, humble or elaborate. • Women were strictly excluded from these festivities. • The andron was likely to be the most elaborate room in the house, often having a mosaic floor and luxurious decor. • In the rear wall of the Andron facing the Andronitis is a solid door. 28 • Only the father, sons, or near male kinsmen of the family are allowed to go inside, for it leads into the Gyneconitis, the hall of the women. Greek Period
  • 29. G YN E C O N I T I S • The women are forbidden to participate in so much of public life that their own peculiar world is especially reserved to them. • Male guests to houses were allowed no further than the andron; beyond this were the women's quarters. • The GynĂŚconitis, or Hall of the Women, was a second colonnaded courtyard, with its own set of rooms leading from it. • These would include the kitchen, possibly a bathroom, more storage rooms, and small sleeping chambers for the female slaves. T H AL A M O S • Leading from this, or possibly on a second storey, would be the thalamos - the master bedroom belonging to the master and mistress of the house. • Some houses contained a second large bedroom, known as the ante-thalamos, 29 for the daughters of the house. • The most precious possessions and ornaments of the family, as well as the best furniture, would be kept in the thalamos. Greek Period
  • 30. • One of the rooms in the very rear is the kitchen; • Others are the sleeping closets of the slave women. • Another special room is set apart for the working of wool, although this chief occupation of the female part of the household is likely to be carried on in the open inner court itself, if the weather is fine. F UR NISHI NG S OF A G R E E K HOUSE • These houses, even owned by the lordly rich, are surprisingly simple in their furnishings. • The furniture includes - Beds, couches, chairs (usually backless), stools, footstools, and small portable tables. • Huge chests, heavy and carved, in which most of the household could be locked away were the main storage furniture. • Oriental carpets are often used as wall draperies or couch covers rather than 30 upon the floors. • There was a very simple wardrobe – or a chest of drawers for the storage of clothes. Greek Period
  • 31. • There is a marked absence of heavy and unhealthful upholstery; but the simple bed - four posts with cushion stuffed with feathers or wool has its woodwork adorned with carving. • On festival days the house will be hung with brilliant and elaborately wrought tapestries usually kept in the great chests. • The whole bed is given an elegant effect by the magnificently embroidered scarlet tapestry which overspreads it. • Moreover, the different household vessels, the stone and bronze lamps, the various table dishes, even the common pottery put to the humblest uses, all have a beauty, a chaste elegance, a saving touch of deft ornamentation, which transforms them out of "kitchen ware" into works of art. • Those black water pots covered with red-clay figures are simple but supremely beautiful. 31 Greek Period
  • 32. • In conclusion, it is easy to see the effect that ancient Greeks furnished their houses with five main types of furniture in ancient Greece which were made for practicality then, and have continued to serve their purpose to this day. • The stools, couches, tables, chests, and chairs of the Greeks are merely more additions to the grand assortment of Greek items and ideas that have had an immense influence on Western life today. • Furniture is easier to carry than sculptures. • The only complete surviving piece of wooden classical Greek furniture was found far from Greece, in an Egyptian tomb. And Rome also must have imported Greek furniture. • An impressive and influential stone throne exists in three identical versions this is a marble throne in S. Giorgorio Magno, Rome decorated with winged lions and acanthus scrolls. 32 Greek Period