1 00:00:00,189 --> 00:00:03,272 (gentle piano music) 2 00:00:04,960 --> 00:00:06,070 - [Beth] We're standing in the Louvre, 3 00:00:06,070 --> 00:00:09,150 looking at the very famous Nike of Samothrace. 4 00:00:09,150 --> 00:00:11,880 Now a Nike personifies victory. 5 00:00:11,880 --> 00:00:13,750 - [Steven] And was the goddess of victory as well. 6 00:00:13,750 --> 00:00:16,600 This sculpture is 18 feet tall if you include 7 00:00:16,600 --> 00:00:17,960 the ship that she stands on. 8 00:00:17,960 --> 00:00:21,210 And it's placed at the top of one of the grand staircases, 9 00:00:21,210 --> 00:00:23,710 so it is incredibly dramatic. 10 00:00:23,710 --> 00:00:25,620 - [Beth] She was found in pieces. 11 00:00:25,620 --> 00:00:28,310 She wasn't found whole the way that we see her today, 12 00:00:28,310 --> 00:00:29,900 and she's been reconstructed. 13 00:00:29,900 --> 00:00:32,570 The pieces that were missing have been filled in. 14 00:00:32,570 --> 00:00:34,810 And she was recently restored. 15 00:00:34,810 --> 00:00:36,100 - [Steven] Originally, this was placed 16 00:00:36,100 --> 00:00:37,680 in the Sanctuary of the Great Gods 17 00:00:37,680 --> 00:00:41,460 on the Island of Samothrace in the northeastern Aegean Sea. 18 00:00:41,460 --> 00:00:43,220 But we should say that we have very little information 19 00:00:43,220 --> 00:00:44,680 about this particular cult. 20 00:00:44,680 --> 00:00:47,150 What we do have is a magnificent sculpture. 21 00:00:47,150 --> 00:00:49,260 It was carved during the Hellenistic period. 22 00:00:49,260 --> 00:00:51,000 This is after the classical period, 23 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:54,530 after Alexander the Great created one of the largest empires 24 00:00:54,530 --> 00:00:56,210 the world had known to that date. 25 00:00:56,210 --> 00:01:00,130 And it was a period when Greek art was extremely expressive. 26 00:01:00,130 --> 00:01:03,720 And in fact, art historians often pair this sculpture 27 00:01:03,720 --> 00:01:06,380 in its style with a sculpture that we find 28 00:01:06,380 --> 00:01:10,310 on the great frieze at the Altar of Zeus at Pergamon. 29 00:01:10,310 --> 00:01:11,910 - [Beth] In both cases, there's a sense 30 00:01:11,910 --> 00:01:14,970 of energy, and drama, and power. 31 00:01:14,970 --> 00:01:18,300 And although we can compare the drapery that clings 32 00:01:18,300 --> 00:01:21,410 in these complex folds to the body, to the sculptures 33 00:01:21,410 --> 00:01:25,540 on the earlier Parthenon, there's so much more drama here. 34 00:01:25,540 --> 00:01:27,000 - [Steven] I love the way in which the drape 35 00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:28,420 seems to be whipped by the wind. 36 00:01:28,420 --> 00:01:29,540 And it's interesting to note 37 00:01:29,540 --> 00:01:31,610 that the way that this ship would have originally 38 00:01:31,610 --> 00:01:33,530 been oriented, it would have been facing 39 00:01:33,530 --> 00:01:36,710 towards the coast with the wind coming off the sea. 40 00:01:36,710 --> 00:01:39,910 And so the actual wind on Samothrace would have functioned 41 00:01:39,910 --> 00:01:42,850 as a collaborator with the illusion of the sculpture. 42 00:01:42,850 --> 00:01:45,190 - [Beth] Now Nike figures are not unusual 43 00:01:45,190 --> 00:01:46,320 in ancient Greek art. 44 00:01:46,320 --> 00:01:51,320 To me, what's so special about this figure is the tension 45 00:01:51,380 --> 00:01:54,680 between the lower half of the body and the upper half. 46 00:01:54,680 --> 00:01:58,000 She's clearly alighting, landing on this ship, 47 00:01:58,000 --> 00:01:59,990 but with the lower part of her body, 48 00:01:59,990 --> 00:02:02,530 I feel that pull downward. 49 00:02:02,530 --> 00:02:07,070 But the upper part of her body seems to still be held aloft, 50 00:02:07,070 --> 00:02:10,180 and so her torso stretches up 51 00:02:10,180 --> 00:02:13,730 and twists slightly in the opposite direction of her legs. 52 00:02:13,730 --> 00:02:15,490 So there's this upward movement, 53 00:02:15,490 --> 00:02:17,820 but downward movement at the same time 54 00:02:17,820 --> 00:02:20,300 - [Steven] The sense of naturalism is so extraordinary 55 00:02:20,300 --> 00:02:22,990 that there seems to be nothing improbable 56 00:02:22,990 --> 00:02:26,020 about the wings attached to the shoulders of this figure. 57 00:02:26,020 --> 00:02:27,970 It just seems completely natural. 58 00:02:27,970 --> 00:02:29,790 - [Beth] It used to be thought that perhaps 59 00:02:29,790 --> 00:02:32,280 this figure stood within a fountain 60 00:02:32,280 --> 00:02:34,410 and perhaps was blowing a trumpet 61 00:02:34,410 --> 00:02:36,770 or offering a crown of victory, 62 00:02:36,770 --> 00:02:40,570 but we now think that her hand was simply outstretched. 63 00:02:40,570 --> 00:02:42,490 Either she was in an open sanctuary 64 00:02:42,490 --> 00:02:44,700 or a slightly enclosed sanctuary. 65 00:02:44,700 --> 00:02:48,720 I love the pinkish white, almost golden color 66 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:51,690 of the marble that she's carved from 67 00:02:51,690 --> 00:02:54,510 and the grayish color of the ship. 68 00:02:54,510 --> 00:02:55,600 - [Steven] There's a wonderful contrast 69 00:02:55,600 --> 00:02:57,230 between those two materials. 70 00:02:57,230 --> 00:03:00,180 Although she's lost her head, and both of her arms, 71 00:03:00,180 --> 00:03:02,060 and other bits and pieces as well, 72 00:03:02,060 --> 00:03:05,680 we are so lucky to have this sculpture this intact. 73 00:03:05,680 --> 00:03:08,200 - [Beth] Well think about all that's been lost 74 00:03:08,200 --> 00:03:12,060 that didn't survive and the incredible achievements 75 00:03:12,060 --> 00:03:15,858 of ancient Greek and specifically Hellenistic art. 76 00:03:15,858 --> 00:03:18,941 (gentle piano music)