Tauromachia (fresk)
Tauromachia Tauromachia - Minoan fresco discovered in the palace in Knossos. Dated in the middle of the 16th century BC. The mural is currently on display at the 14th Archaeological Museum in Heraklion.
In the center of the image is a large white-brown bull. Pulled forward and back hooves indicate that the animal is in a rush. It is accompanied by three human figures dressed only in short skirts and with different skin color, which in the Minoan art meant gender difference. On the left hand side the woman holds the horns leaving the bull's head. On the right side is the second girl, stretching her arms towards the performers on the back of the evolution of acrobatics. The scene was shown on a light blue background and enclosed in a frame decorated with abstract, stone-like symbols in white, blue and red.
Since the figures are different in skin color, two or three different people are considered to be depicted in the painting. Some scholars interpret the fresco as a narrative scene, describing the different stages of the same evolution over time: the acrobat would grab the horns of the rushed bull, make a jump over his back, and jump off the back.
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