For most people today, ancient Greek sculpture brings to mind images of pearly white human figures. Yet, ever since the first excavations of Pompeii in the 17th century, archeologists have known that these sculptures were painted in vivid colours. The German archeologists Vinzenz Brinkmann and Ulrike Koch-Brinkmann have been studying the polychromatic nature of ancient Greek sculptures for some four decades – a process that involves research through reconstruction. In this short film from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Brinkmann discusses their process, and why the visual code of white antique marble persists today.
Video by the Metropolitan Museum of Art
Directors: Sarah Cowan, Jonathan Sanden
Is it more likely you’re a person with a past, or an ephemeral brain in a void?
‘It’s not beautiful, but it’s interesting’ – an ageing nude model surveys her body
An animator wonders: can you ever depict someone without making them a caricature?
Inside the unique London community built by residents to defy housing discrimination
With human help, AIs are generating a new aesthetics. The results are trippy
From manners to mud – two women recall coming of age in Victorian London
The joys and complications of raising a baby without gender in a binary world
Can art in a swanky restaurant ever be transcendent? On Rothko’s Seagram Murals
Why did the Romans create a massive, entirely impractical map of their empire?