Classical Greek sculpture is the 5th-4th century BCE Greek style defined by idealized human proportions, naturalistic contrapposto poses, and balanced harmony. On the AP Art History exam, it anchors Unit 2 and explains why Romans copied Greek works like the Doryphoros.
Classical Greek sculpture is the style Greek artists developed in the 5th and 4th centuries BCE, when they stopped carving stiff, frontal figures and started carving bodies that look like they could actually move. The hallmarks are idealized proportions (the perfect body, not a specific person's body), naturalistic anatomy, and contrapposto, the relaxed weight-shift stance where one leg bears the weight and the hips and shoulders tilt in opposite directions. Polykleitos's Doryphoros (Spear Bearer) is the textbook example. He even wrote a treatise, the Canon, laying out the math behind ideal proportions.
The big idea is balance. Classical sculptors wanted figures that felt alive but also perfect, real anatomy organized by ideal ratios. That combination became the gold standard for the entire Mediterranean. Per the CED's essential knowledge (INT-1.A.1 and INT-1.A.3), styles circulated actively among Mediterranean cultures, and Etruscan and Roman artists absorbed Greek conventions directly. Most 'Greek' sculptures you study, including the Doryphoros, actually survive as Roman marble copies of lost Greek bronzes. That fact alone is exam gold.
This term lives in Unit 2 (Ancient Mediterranean, 3500 BCE-300 CE), specifically Topic 2.2, Interactions Across Cultures in Ancient Mediterranean Art. It directly supports learning objective 2.2.A, explaining how interactions with other cultures affect art and art making. Classical Greek sculpture is the middle link in a chain the CED cares a lot about. Greek artists built on Egyptian and Near Eastern conventions (the kouros borrows the rigid Egyptian standing pose), then Etruscan and Roman artists borrowed from the Greeks in turn. If you can trace that chain of influence, you're doing exactly what Topic 2.2 asks. It also gives you the formal vocabulary (idealization, naturalism, contrapposto) that attribution questions on the exam are built around.
Keep studying AP Art History Unit 2
Contrapposto (Unit 2)
Contrapposto is the single biggest visual clue that a sculpture is Classical rather than Archaic. The weight-shift stance makes a stone figure look like it just paused mid-step, and the Doryphoros is the go-to example.
Kouros and the Archaic period (Unit 2)
The kouros is the 'before' picture. Archaic figures stand frontal and symmetrical with incised, patterned anatomy and the archaic smile, showing Egypt's influence on early Greece. Classical sculpture is what happens when Greek artists loosen that pose into naturalism.
Augustus of Prima Porta (Unit 2)
Augustus's portrait copies the contrapposto and ideal proportions of the Doryphoros to make a political claim. Borrowing the Classical Greek body language told viewers the emperor was as perfect as a Greek hero. This is INT-1.A.3 in action.
Parthenon Frieze (Unit 2)
The frieze shows the Classical style applied to relief sculpture on architecture, with idealized riders and processing figures in fluid, naturalistic motion. It proves the style wasn't just for freestanding statues.
Classical Greek sculpture shows up two main ways. First, attribution: multiple-choice and short-essay questions describe formal traits and ask you to identify the tradition. Frontal pose, geometric stylization, incised lines, and an archaic smile point to Archaic Greece; contrapposto, naturalistic musculature, and idealized proportions point to Classical Greece. Practice questions regularly test this exact distinction using works like the Anavysos Kouros versus the Doryphoros. Second, cross-cultural influence: you may be asked why Roman patrons commissioned marble copies of Greek originals, or how a Roman work like the Augustus of Prima Porta borrows Classical Greek conventions. The 2025 Short Essay Q6 drew on this term, so be ready to write a focused paragraph connecting form (what it looks like) to function and context (why a culture wanted it to look that way).
Archaic sculpture (roughly 600-480 BCE) is rigid and frontal, with stylized, incised anatomy and the famous archaic smile, modeled on Egyptian standing figures. Classical sculpture (5th-4th centuries BCE) breaks that rigidity with contrapposto, naturalistic anatomy, and calm, idealized faces. Quick test on the exam: if the figure smiles and stands stiff, it's Archaic; if it shifts its weight and looks serenely perfect, it's Classical.
Classical Greek sculpture dates to the 5th and 4th centuries BCE and combines idealized proportions with naturalistic anatomy and poses.
Contrapposto, the weight-shift stance seen in Polykleitos's Doryphoros, is the fastest way to identify a Classical work on an attribution question.
The style sits in the middle of a Mediterranean influence chain: Greece borrowed conventions from Egypt and the Near East, then Etruscans and Romans borrowed from Greece (INT-1.A.1, INT-1.A.3).
Most Classical Greek sculptures survive only as Roman marble copies of lost Greek bronze originals, which itself shows how prized the style was.
Romans like Augustus reused the Classical Greek body type for propaganda, making the emperor look as ideal as a Greek athlete or god.
Archaic sculpture is frontal, stylized, and smiling; Classical sculpture is naturalistic, weight-shifted, and serene.
It's the Greek sculptural style of the 5th-4th centuries BCE, defined by idealized human proportions, naturalistic anatomy, and contrapposto. It's central to Unit 2 and the cross-cultural influence ideas in Topic 2.2.
Often no. Many famous works, including the Doryphoros, survive only as Roman marble copies of lost Greek bronzes. Roman patrons commissioned copies because Classical Greek art carried huge cultural prestige, which is a common exam question.
Archaic figures (like the Anavysos Kouros) are rigid, frontal, and stylized with incised details and an archaic smile. Classical figures use contrapposto, realistic musculature, and calm idealized faces. The shift happens around 480 BCE.
Contrapposto is the weight-shift stance where one leg supports the body and the hips and shoulders counter-tilt, making a figure look relaxed and alive. Polykleitos's Doryphoros is the defining example, and spotting contrapposto is how you nail Classical attributions on the exam.
Yes, directly. The Augustus of Prima Porta borrows the Doryphoros's contrapposto and ideal proportions to glorify the emperor, and the CED (INT-1.A.3) explicitly says Etruscan and Roman artists were influenced by earlier Mediterranean cultures, especially Greece.