Anthropology
Related: About this forumResearchers Used 3D Tech to Rebuild the Parthenon's Lighting and Discovered It Was Nothing Like We Imagined
The classical assumption of how light and shadows danced in the Parthenon is all wrong.
byTibi Puiu May 13, 2025
Edited and reviewed by Zoe Gordon
Credit: Juan de Lara.
In the summer of 1897, a team of architects in Nashville completed a life-size replica of the Parthenon an homage to classical Greece in the heart of the American South. They expected to bask in the radiance of antiquity. Instead, they found themselves squinting into gloom.
For generations, scholars and artists imagined the Parthenon as a sunlit sanctuary: a hall of reason, radiant with white marble and open to the heavens. That illusion, born of Enlightenment fantasies and modern aesthetic ideals, shaped textbooks, paintings, and even museum displays. But the Parthenons true nature, as a new study reveals, was something very different and far more extraordinary.
Inside, it turns out, was deliberately very dark.
Archaeologist Juan de Lara of Oxford University spent four years reconstructing the ancient temples lighting with a precision never before achieved. He lifts the veil both literal and metaphorical on how the Parthenon was meant to be seen. What emerges is not a sun-drenched place of worship, but a calculated theater of shadow and revelation.
Through subtle architectural tricks angled doorways, reflective pools, hidden skylights, and marble that shimmered only in low light the ancient Athenians transformed their most sacred temple into a kind of optical stage. Light became a tool. And at precisely timed moments, it became a miracle.
A Temple of Carefully Choreographed Light
More:
https://www.zmescience.com/science/news-science/researchers-used-3d-tech-to-rebuild-the-parthenons-lighting-and-discovered-it-was-nothing-like-we-imagined/

SheltieLover
(69,307 posts)Ty for sharing!
rampartd
(1,916 posts)judi lynn posts some good stuff.
SheltieLover
(69,307 posts)