The Year One

A look at the art created across the world in the years around Year One of the Western calendar reveals an incredible richness and variety of cultures.
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Standing Male Figure, Earthenware, Indonesia (Java, Lumajang, Pasiran)
Indonesia (Java, Lumajang, Pasiran)
ca. 500 BCE–300 CE
Jar, Earthenware with incised decoration, Japan
Japan
ca. 100–300
Covered Jar (Hu), Earthenware with painted decoration, China
China
2nd–1st century BCE
Engraved spouted jar, Maya artist(s), Indurated limestone, Maya
Maya artist(s)
50 BCE–100 CE
Bird Pendant, Jade (jadeite), Guanacaste-Nicoya
Guanacaste-Nicoya
1st century BCE–1st century CE
Marble statue of a draped seated man, Zeuxis as sculptor, Marble, Pentelic, Roman
Zeuxis
1st century BCE
Torso of a Ptolemaic King, inscribed with cartouches of a late Ptolemy, Basalt
80–30 B.C.
Earring in the form of a three-lobed wineskin, Gold, Parthian
Parthian
ca. 2nd–1st century BCE
Horned Figure, Shaman (?), Ceramic, Colima
Colima
2nd century BCE–3rd century CE
Figure, Ivory (walrus), Old Bering Sea
Old Bering Sea
150 BCE–100 CE
Figure of a reclining woman, Alabaster (gypsum), Parthian
Parthian
ca. 2nd century BCE–2nd century CE
Sword and Scabbard, Iron blade, copper alloy hilt and scabbard, Celtic
Celtic
ca. 60 BCE
Cubiculum (bedroom) from the Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale, Fresco, Roman
Roman
ca. 50–40 BCE
The Temple of Dendur, Aeolian sandstone
completed by 10 B.C.
Terracotta bowl, Perennius Tigranus as owner, Terracotta, Roman
Perennius Tigranus
ca. 10 BCE–10 CE
Spherical jar with four rows of painted decoration, Pottery, paint
100 B.C.–A.D. 300
Wall painting: Polyphemus and Galatea in a landscape, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase, Fresco, Roman
Roman
last decade of the 1st century BCE
Wall painting on black ground: Aedicula with small landscape, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase, Fresco, Roman, Pompeian
Roman, Pompeian
last decade of the 1st century BCE
Wall painting: Perseus and Andromeda in landscape, from the imperial villa at Boscotrecase, Fresco, Roman
Roman
last decade of the 1st century BCE
Goddess who bestows riches, probably Sri Lakshmi, Molded terracotta, India, Chandraketugarh, West Bengal
India, Chandraketugarh, West Bengal
1st century BCE
Marble statue of a togatus (man wearing a toga), Marble, Roman
Roman
1st century CE
Glass garland bowl, Glass, Roman
Roman
late 1st century BCE
Glass ribbed bowl, Glass, Roman
Roman
1st century CE
Marble portrait of the emperor Augustus, Marble, Roman
Roman
ca. 14–37 CE
Rhyton terminating in the forepart of a wild cat, Silver, mercury gilding, Parthian
Parthian
ca. 1st century BCE
Situla with Design of Boats, Bronze, Vietnam
Vietnam
ca. 500 BCE–300 CE
Belt adornment with an eagle and its prey, Gold, turquoise inlay, Parthian or Kushan
Parthian or Kushan
ca.1st–2nd century CE
Bronze statue of an aristocratic boy, Bronze, Roman
Roman
27 BCE–14 CE
Terret (Rein Guide), Copper alloy, champlevé enamel, Celtic or Roman
Celtic or Roman
1–100
Open bowl, Ceramic, paint, Nabataean
Nabataean
ca. 1st century BCE–1st century CE
Pair of Belt Plaques with Winged Horses, Unidentified artist, Gilded bronze, China
Unidentified artist
1st century
Double-spout bottle with flying figure, Nasca artist(s), Ceramic, slip, Nasca
Nasca artist(s)
300–500 CE

Throughout the world different systems have been used to mark the passage of time, but it has been common for cultures to count the passing of years from a specific event in their past. For example, the ancient Greeks counted years from the first Olympic Games (which correlates to 776 B.C.), while the Romans based their calendar on the founding year of Rome (traditionally 753 B.C.). The Jewish calendar starts from their idea of when the world was created (3760 B.C.), while the Muslim calendar begins with the Hijra, the migration of the prophet Muhammad from Mecca to Medina in 622 A.D. A monk called Dionysius Exiguus (early sixth century A.D.) invented the dating system most widely used in the Western world. For Dionysius, the birth of Christ represented Year One. He believed that this occurred 753 years after the foundation of Rome. Although this is almost certainly wrong, since the Gospels state that Christ was born under Herod the Great, who died in 4 B.C., the system was adopted with years expressed as either B.C. (Before Christ) or A.D. (Anno Domini— “The Year of Our Lord”). The abbreviations BCE (before the common era) and CE (common era) are sometimes used.

A look at the art created across the world in the years around Year One of the Western calendar reveals an incredible richness and variety of cultures. It was a time of great cultural interaction, with vast areas crisscrossed by traders and adventurers who journeyed both east and west to bring back coveted goods and tantalizing scraps of information about exotic lands. Some relationships were established through the extension of Roman power under the rule of Augustus, the first Roman emperor (27 B.C.–14 A.D.). Others evolved through the overland and maritime trade routes that provided the East and West with tantalizing glimpses of each other and that also linked many Asian cultures in an unprecedented fashion. Artistic traditions and religious beliefs were exchanged along these global networks, as were luxury goods such as Roman glass, Chinese silk, and East Indian pepper.

In Europe, Celtic peoples excelled in intricate metalwork, and in Egypt a fascinating hybrid combining Greco-Roman and age-old Egyptian styles predominated. East of the Mediterranean, such wealthy centers as Palmyra, Petra, the kingdoms of southern Arabia, and the mighty Parthian empire produced a wide range of sculpture, ceramics, and precious-metal objects that served both religious and luxury purposes as well as everyday uses. Continuing eastward from Parthia to what is now Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northern India, a traveler in the Year One would have discovered the Kushan empire, where a distinctive early Buddhist art sometimes incorporated influences from Greece and Rome. In East Asia, China’s great empire under the Han dynasty was home to sophisticated arts in every medium; semi-nomadic peoples in northern China made metalwork, often to adorn the gear for their horses; and characteristic arts had begun to develop in Korea and Japan. Meanwhile, in cultures across the Pacific Ocean, people such as the Nazca in South America and the Mayan civilization in Mesoamerica were creating powerful and expressive objects made of stone, ceramic, and gold.


Contributors

Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2004


Further Reading

Milleker, Elizabeth J., ed. The Year One: Art of the Ancient World East and West. Exhibition catalogue. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000. See on MetPublications


Citation

View Citations

Department of Ancient Near Eastern Art. “The Year One.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/yron/hd_yron.htm (October 2004)