The Glory That Was Greece From a Female Perspective
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/19/arts/design/19wome.html?_r=1&th&emc=th
It’s funny, given American political ideals, that our museums offer so
few major exhibitions of ancient Greek art. The Met had one called
“The Greek Miracle: Classical Sculpture From the Dawn of Democracy,”
but that was in 1993. It was an expensive, blockbustery thing that
told a story we already knew, and one that is only partly true: that
Western culture, or whatever is good about it, was a Greek invention.

Worshiping Women Some of us asked at the time why the curators, who
had been handed loans of almost mythic status — the “Kritios Boy,” the
“Grave Stele of Hegeso” — did so little with them. The show could have
been an opportunity to break scholarly ground: to examine the role of
class in ancient Greece, or to consider the lives of women and
children, or to reconsider what classicism means as a value-laden
historical concept. What we got was art-survey boilerplate.

Two years later the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore mounted a show on
women in ancient Greece, impressively. And now New York has one too.
Moderate in size, efficiently presented and somewhat stiffly titled
“Worshiping Women: Ritual and Reality in Classical Athens,” it is not
at the Met or any other museum but at the Onassis Cultural Center in
Midtown, a kuntshalle-style space, now almost a decade old, devoted to
Hellenic culture.

As conceived by its two curators — Nikolaos Kaltsas, director of the
National Archaeological Museum of Greece, and Alan Shapiro, professor
of archaeology at Johns Hopkins University — the show’s intention is
twofold: to present a nuanced view of a still-elusive subject, and to
correct, or at least revise, existing misconceptions.

The main misconception is the notion that women had a universally mute
and passive role in Athenian society. It is true that they lived with
restrictions modern Westerners would find intolerable. Technically
they were not citizens. In terms of civil rights, their status
differed little from that of slaves. Marriages were arranged; girls
were expected to have children in their midteens. Yet, the show
argues, the assumption that women lived in a state of purdah,
completely removed from public life, is contradicted by the depictions
of them in art.

Much of that art is religious, which is no surprise considering the
commanding female deities in the Greek pantheon. Like most gods in
most cultures they are moody, contradictory personalities, above-it-
all in knowledge but quick to play personal politics and intervene in
human fate. Four of them make in-depth appearances here.

Athena comes on as a striding warrior goddess, armed and dangerous,
avid as a wasp, in a tiny bronze statuette from the fifth century B.C.
This is the goddess who, in “The Iliad,” egged the Greeks on and
manipulated their victory against Troy, and the one who later became
the spiritual chief executive of the Athenian military economy.

Yet seen painted in silhouette on a black vase, she conveys a
different disposition. She’s still in armor but stands at ease, a
stylus poised in one hand, a writing tablet open like a laptop in the
other. The goddess of wisdom is checking her mail, and patiently
answering each plea and complaint.

Artemis is equally complex. A committed virgin, she took on the
special assignment of protecting pregnant women and keeping an eye on
children, whose carved portraits filled her shrines. She was a wild-
game hunter, but one with a deep Franciscan streak. In one image she
lets her hounds loose on deer; in another she cradles a fawn.

But no sooner have we pegged her as the outdoorsy type than she
changes. On a gold-hued vase from the State Hermitage Museum in St.
Petersburg she appears as Princess Diana, to use her Roman name,
crowned and bejeweled in a pleated floor-length gown.

Demeter was worshiped as an earth goddess long before she became an
Olympian. Her mystery cult had female priests, women-only rites and a
direct line to the underworld. And although you might not expect
Aphrodite, paragon of physical beauty, to have a dark side, she does.

She was much adored; there were shrines to her everywhere. And she had
the added advantage of being exotic: she seems to have drifted in from
somewhere far east of Greece, bringing a swarm of nude winged urchins
with her. But as goddess of love she was unreliable, sometimes
perverse. Yes, she brings people amorously together, but when things
go wrong, watch out:

“Like a windstorm/Punishing the oak trees,/Love shakes my heart.”

So wrote the poet and worshiper of women, Sappho, who knew.

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