Throughout the Archaic period, Greek artists began to focus more and more carefully on the anatomical representation of the human body. "Inscrutable Smiles: Viewing Greek Art" notes that Archaic artwork displayed an impulse for pattern. Artists continued to sculpt forms that honored a tradition of balanced patterns in the rendering of musculature and bones. Human representations from this period were symmetrical, and little variety existed in posture and gesture.
One element of Archaic sculpture is that the arms and legs have been freed from stone. As in Egyptian sculpture, one leg is often in front of the other. Unlike Egyptian sculpture, in which the arms and legs are rendered in high relief, Greek Archaic sculptors completely cut away the stone between the figure's limbs and body. Artists sculpted large-scale forms for temple exteriors in addition to freestanding statues. Most Archaic Greek sculptures were life-size or larger; were made of white marble; and were originally painted in bright, naturalistic colors.
Two types of statues were especially dominant: the male kouros, or "young man," and the female kore, or "young woman." The Archaic korai represented deities, priestesses or nymphs. The kouroi were almost always nude and represented gods, warriors and athletes. Nudity removed the figure from a specific place, time or social class.
The faces of human figures in Greek Archaic art were telling: the eyes were large, almond shaped and wide open. The mouth was shaped into a strange closed smile called the Archaic smile. This smile transcended emotion and cast the figure into a realm of permanence.