fbpx
Wikipedia

Roman art

The art of Ancient Rome, and the territories of its Republic and later Empire, includes architecture, painting, sculpture and mosaic work. Luxury objects in metal-work, gem engraving, ivory carvings, and glass are sometimes considered to be minor forms of Roman art,[1] although they were not considered as such at the time. Sculpture was perhaps considered as the highest form of art by Romans, but figure painting was also highly regarded. A very large body of sculpture has survived from about the 1st century BC onward, though very little from before, but very little painting remains, and probably nothing that a contemporary would have considered to be of the highest quality.

Roman art
Fresco from the Villa of the Mysteries. Pompeii, 80 BC

Ancient Roman pottery was not a luxury product, but a vast production of "fine wares" in terra sigillata were decorated with reliefs that reflected the latest taste, and provided a large group in society with stylish objects at what was evidently an affordable price. Roman coins were an important means of propaganda, and have survived in enormous numbers.

Introduction

 
 
Left image: A Roman fresco from Pompeii showing a Maenad in silk dress, 1st century AD
Right image: A fresco of a young man from the Villa di Arianna, Stabiae, 1st century AD.

While the traditional view of the ancient Roman artists is that they often borrowed from, and copied Greek precedents (much of the Greek sculptures known today are in the form of Roman marble copies), more of recent analysis has indicated that Roman art is a highly creative pastiche relying heavily on Greek models but also encompassing Etruscan, native Italic, and even Egyptian visual culture. Stylistic eclecticism and practical application are the hallmarks of much Roman art.

Pliny, Ancient Rome's most important historian concerning the arts, recorded that nearly all the forms of art – sculpture, landscape, portrait painting, even genre painting – were advanced in Greek times, and in some cases, more advanced than in Rome. Though very little remains of Greek wall art and portraiture, certainly Greek sculpture and vase painting bears this out. These forms were not likely surpassed by Roman artists in fineness of design or execution. As another example of the lost "Golden Age", he singled out Peiraikos, "whose artistry is surpassed by only a very few ... He painted barbershops and shoemakers’ stalls, donkeys, vegetables, and such, and for that reason came to be called the 'painter of vulgar subjects'; yet these works are altogether delightful, and they were sold at higher prices than the greatest paintings of many other artists.”[2] The adjective "vulgar" is used here in its original definition, which means "common".

The Greek antecedents of Roman art were legendary. In the mid-5th century BC, the most famous Greek artists were Polygnotos, noted for his wall murals, and Apollodoros, the originator of chiaroscuro. The development of realistic technique is credited to Zeuxis and Parrhasius, who according to ancient Greek legend, are said to have once competed in a bravura display of their talents, history's earliest descriptions of trompe-l'œil painting.[3] In sculpture, Skopas, Praxiteles, Phidias, and Lysippos were the foremost sculptors. It appears that Roman artists had much Ancient Greek art to copy from, as trade in art was brisk throughout the empire, and much of the Greek artistic heritage found its way into Roman art through books and teaching. Ancient Greek treatises on the arts are known to have existed in Roman times, though are now lost.[4] Many Roman artists came from Greek colonies and provinces.[5]

 
A Roman fresco depicting Amphion and Zethus subject Dirce to the bull (from the House of the Vettii, Pompeii)
 
Preparation of an animal sacrifice; marble, fragment of an architectural relief, first quarter of the 2nd century CE; from Rome, Italy

The high number of Roman copies of Greek art also speaks of the esteem Roman artists had for Greek art, and perhaps of its rarer and higher quality.[5] Many of the art forms and methods used by the Romans – such as high and low relief, free-standing sculpture, bronze casting, vase art, mosaic, cameo, coin art, fine jewelry and metalwork, funerary sculpture, perspective drawing, caricature, genre and portrait painting, landscape painting, architectural sculpture, and trompe-l'œil painting – all were developed or refined by Ancient Greek artists.[6] One exception is the Roman bust, which did not include the shoulders. The traditional head-and-shoulders bust may have been an Etruscan or early Roman form.[7] Virtually every artistic technique and method used by Renaissance artists 1,900 years later had been demonstrated by Ancient Greek artists, with the notable exceptions of oil colors and mathematically accurate perspective.[8] Where Greek artists were highly revered in their society, most Roman artists were anonymous and considered tradesmen. There is no recording, as in Ancient Greece, of the great masters of Roman art, and practically no signed works. Where Greeks worshipped the aesthetic qualities of great art, and wrote extensively on artistic theory, Roman art was more decorative and indicative of status and wealth, and apparently not the subject of scholars or philosophers.[9]

Owing in part to the fact that the Roman cities were far larger than the Greek city-states in power and population, and generally less provincial, art in Ancient Rome took on a wider, and sometimes more utilitarian, purpose. Roman culture assimilated many cultures and was for the most part tolerant of the ways of conquered peoples.[5] Roman art was commissioned, displayed, and owned in far greater quantities, and adapted to more uses than in Greek times. Wealthy Romans were more materialistic; they decorated their walls with art, their home with decorative objects, and themselves with fine jewelry.

In the Christian era of the late Empire, from 350 to 500 CE, wall painting, mosaic ceiling and floor work, and funerary sculpture thrived, while full-sized sculpture in the round and panel painting died out, most likely for religious reasons.[10] When Constantine moved the capital of the empire to Byzantium (renamed Constantinople), Roman art incorporated Eastern influences to produce the Byzantine style of the late empire. When Rome was sacked in the 5th century, artisans moved to and found work in the Eastern capital. The Church of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople employed nearly 10,000 workmen and artisans, in a final burst of Roman art under Emperor Justinian (527–565 CE), who also ordered the creation of the famous mosaics of Basilica of San Vitale in the city of Ravenna.[11]

Painting

 
Female painter sitting on a campstool and painting a statue of Dionysus or Priapus onto a panel which is held by a boy. Fresco from Pompeii, 1st century

Of the vast body of Roman painting we now have only a very few pockets of survivals, with many documented types not surviving at all, or doing so only from the very end of the period. The best known and most important pocket is the wall paintings from Pompeii, Herculaneum and other sites nearby, which show how residents of a wealthy seaside resort decorated their walls in the century or so before the fatal eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. A succession of dated styles have been defined and analysed by modern art historians beginning with August Mau, showing increasing elaboration and sophistication.

Starting in the 3rd century AD and finishing by about 400 we have a large body of paintings from the Catacombs of Rome, by no means all Christian, showing the later continuation of the domestic decorative tradition in a version adapted - probably not greatly adapted - for use in burial chambers, in what was probably a rather humbler social milieu than the largest houses in Pompeii. Much of Nero's palace in Rome, the Domus Aurea, survived as grottos and gives us examples which we can be sure represent the very finest quality of wall-painting in its style, and which may well have represented significant innovation in style. There are a number of other parts of painted rooms surviving from Rome and elsewhere, which somewhat help to fill in the gaps of our knowledge of wall-painting. From Roman Egypt there are a large number of what are known as Fayum mummy portraits, bust portraits on wood added to the outside of mummies by a Romanized middle class; despite their very distinct local character they are probably broadly representative of Roman style in painted portraits, which are otherwise entirely lost.

Nothing remains of the Greek paintings imported to Rome during the 4th and 5th centuries, or of the painting on wood done in Italy during that period.[4] In sum, the range of samples is confined to only about 200 years out of the about 900 years of Roman history,[12] and of provincial and decorative painting. Most of this wall painting was done using the a secco (dry) method, but some fresco paintings also existed in Roman times. There is evidence from mosaics and a few inscriptions that some Roman paintings were adaptations or copies of earlier Greek works.[12] However, adding to the confusion is the fact that inscriptions may be recording the names of immigrant Greek artists from Roman times, not from Ancient Greek originals that were copied.[8] The Romans entirely lacked a tradition of figurative vase-painting comparable to that of the Ancient Greeks, which the Etruscans had emulated.

Variety of subjects

 
The Wedding of Zephyrus and Chloris (54–68 AD, Pompeian Fourth Style) within painted architectural panels from the Casa del Naviglio

Roman painting provides a wide variety of themes: animals, still life, scenes from everyday life, portraits, and some mythological subjects. During the Hellenistic period, it evoked the pleasures of the countryside and represented scenes of shepherds, herds, rustic temples, rural mountainous landscapes and country houses.[8] Erotic scenes are also relatively common. In the late empire, after 200AD, early Christian themes mixed with pagan imagery survive on catacomb walls.[13]

Landscape and vistas

 
Boscotrecase, Pompeii. Third style

The main innovation of Roman painting compared to Greek art was the development of landscapes, in particular incorporating techniques of perspective, though true mathematical perspective developed 1,500 years later. Surface textures, shading, and coloration are well applied but scale and spatial depth was still not rendered accurately. Some landscapes were pure scenes of nature, particularly gardens with flowers and trees, while others were architectural vistas depicting urban buildings. Other landscapes show episodes from mythology, the most famous demonstrating scenes from the Odyssey.[14]

In the cultural point of view, the art of the ancient East would have known landscape painting only as the backdrop to civil or military narrative scenes.[15] This theory is defended by Franz Wickhoff, is debatable. It is possible to see evidence of Greek knowledge of landscape portrayal in Plato's Critias (107b–108b):

... and if we look at the portraiture of divine and of human bodies as executed by painters, in respect of the ease or difficulty with which they succeed in imitating their subjects in the opinion of onlookers, we shall notice in the first place that as regards the earth and mountains and rivers and woods and the whole of heaven, with the things that exist and move therein, we are content if a man is able to represent them with even a small degree of likeness ...[16]

Still life

Roman still life subjects are often placed in illusionist niches or shelves and depict a variety of everyday objects including fruit, live and dead animals, seafood, and shells. Examples of the theme of the glass jar filled with water were skillfully painted and later served as models for the same subject often painted during the Renaissance and Baroque periods.[17]

Portraits

 
The Severan Tondo, a panel painting of the imperial family, c. 200 AD; Antikensammlung, Berlin
 
Fayum mummy portrait of a woman from Roman Egypt with a ringlet hairstyle. Royal Museum of Scotland.

Pliny complained of the declining state of Roman portrait art, "The painting of portraits which used to transmit through the ages the accurate likenesses of people, has entirely gone out ... Indolence has destroyed the arts."[18][19]

In Greece and Rome, wall painting was not considered as high art. The most prestigious form of art besides sculpture was panel painting, i.e. tempera or encaustic painting on wooden panels. Unfortunately, since wood is a perishable material, only a very few examples of such paintings have survived, namely the Severan Tondo from c. 200 AD, a very routine official portrait from some provincial government office, and the well-known Fayum mummy portraits, all from Roman Egypt, and almost certainly not of the highest contemporary quality. The portraits were attached to burial mummies at the face, from which almost all have now been detached. They usually depict a single person, showing the head, or head and upper chest, viewed frontally. The background is always monochrome, sometimes with decorative elements.[20] In terms of artistic tradition, the images clearly derive more from Greco-Roman traditions than Egyptian ones. They are remarkably realistic, though variable in artistic quality, and may indicate that similar art which was widespread elsewhere but did not survive. A few portraits painted on glass and medals from the later empire have survived, as have coin portraits, some of which are considered very realistic as well.[21]

Gold glass

 
Detail of the gold glass medallion in Brescia (Museo di Santa Giulia), most likely Alexandrian, 3rd century AD[22]

Gold glass, or gold sandwich glass, was a technique for fixing a layer of gold leaf with a design between two fused layers of glass, developed in Hellenistic glass and revived in the 3rd century AD. There are a very few large designs, including a very fine group of portraits from the 3rd century with added paint, but the great majority of the around 500 survivals are roundels that are the cut-off bottoms of wine cups or glasses used to mark and decorate graves in the Catacombs of Rome by pressing them into the mortar. They predominantly date from the 4th and 5th centuries. Most are Christian, though there are many pagan and a few Jewish examples. It is likely that they were originally given as gifts on marriage, or festive occasions such as New Year. Their iconography has been much studied, although artistically they are relatively unsophisticated.[23] Their subjects are similar to the catacomb paintings, but with a difference balance including more portraiture. As time went on there was an increase in the depiction of saints.[24] The same technique began to be used for gold tesserae for mosaics in the mid-1st century in Rome, and by the 5th century these had become the standard background for religious mosaics.

The earlier group are "among the most vivid portraits to survive from Early Christian times. They stare out at us with an extraordinary stern and melancholy intensity",[25] and represent the best surviving indications of what high quality Roman portraiture could achieve in paint. The Gennadios medallion in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is a fine example of an Alexandrian portrait on blue glass, using a rather more complex technique and naturalistic style than most Late Roman examples, including painting onto the gold to create shading, and with the Greek inscription showing local dialect features. He had perhaps been given or commissioned the piece to celebrate victory in a musical competition.[26] One of the most famous Alexandrian-style portrait medallions, with an inscription in Egyptian Greek, was later mounted in an Early Medieval crux gemmata in Brescia, in the mistaken belief that it showed the pious empress and Gothic queen Galla Placida and her children;[27] in fact the knot in the central figure's dress may mark a devotee of Isis.[28] This is one of a group of 14 pieces dating to the 3rd century AD, all individualized secular portraits of high quality.[29] The inscription on the medallion is written in the Alexandrian dialect of Greek and hence most likely depicts a family from Roman Egypt.[30] The medallion has also been compared to other works of contemporaneous Roman-Egyptian artwork, such as the Fayum mummy portraits.[22] It is thought that the tiny detail of pieces such as these can only have been achieved using lenses.[31] The later glasses from the catacombs have a level of portraiture that is rudimentary, with features, hairstyles and clothes all following stereotypical styles.[32]

Genre scenes

Roman genre scenes generally depict Romans at leisure and include gambling, music and sexual encounters.[citation needed] Some scenes depict gods and goddesses at leisure.[8][12]

Triumphal paintings

 
Roman fresco from the Villa Boscoreale, 43–30 BC, Metropolitan Museum of Art
 
Roman fresco with a banquet scene from the Casa dei Casti Amanti, Pompeii

From the 3rd century BC, a specific genre known as Triumphal Paintings appeared, as indicated by Pliny (XXXV, 22).[33] These were paintings which showed triumphal entries after military victories, represented episodes from the war, and conquered regions and cities. Summary maps were drawn to highlight key points of the campaign. Josephus describes the painting executed on the occasion of Vespasian and Titus's sack of Jerusalem:

There was also wrought gold and ivory fastened about them all; and many resemblances of the war, and those in several ways, and variety of contrivances, affording a most lively portraiture of itself. For there was to be seen a happy country laid waste, and entire squadrons of enemies slain; while some of them ran away, and some were carried into captivity; with walls of great altitude and magnitude overthrown and ruined by machines; with the strongest fortifications taken, and the walls of most populous cities upon the tops of hills seized on, and an army pouring itself within the walls; as also every place full of slaughter, and supplications of the enemies, when they were no longer able to lift up their hands in way of opposition. Fire also sent upon temples was here represented, and houses overthrown, and falling upon their owners: rivers also, after they came out of a large and melancholy desert, ran down, not into a land cultivated, nor as drink for men, or for cattle, but through a land still on fire upon every side; for the Jews related that such a thing they had undergone during this war. Now the workmanship of these representations was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things, that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it, as if they had been there really present. On the top of every one of these pageants was placed the commander of the city that was taken, and the manner wherein he was taken.[34]

These paintings have disappeared, but they likely influenced the composition of the historical reliefs carved on military sarcophagi, the Arch of Titus, and Trajan's Column. This evidence underscores the significance of landscape painting, which sometimes tended towards being perspective plans.

Ranuccio also describes the oldest painting to be found in Rome, in a tomb on the Esquiline Hill:

It describes a historical scene, on a clear background, painted in four superimposed sections. Several people are identified, such Marcus Fannius and Marcus Fabius. These are larger than the other figures ... In the second zone, to the left, is a city encircled with crenellated walls, in front of which is a large warrior equipped with an oval buckler and a feathered helmet; near him is a man in a short tunic, armed with a spear...Around these two are smaller soldiers in short tunics, armed with spears...In the lower zone a battle is taking place, where a warrior with oval buckler and a feathered helmet is shown larger than the others, whose weapons allow to assume that these are probably Samnites.

This episode is difficult to pinpoint. One of Ranuccio's hypotheses is that it refers to a victory of the consul Fabius Maximus Rullianus during the second war against Samnites in 326 BC. The presentation of the figures with sizes proportional to their importance is typically Roman, and finds itself in plebeian reliefs. This painting is in the infancy of triumphal painting, and would have been accomplished by the beginning of the 3rd century BC to decorate the tomb.

Sculpture

 
Detail from the Ahenobarbus relief showing two Roman soldiers, c. 122 BC
 
Section of Trajan's Column, 113 AD, with scenes from the Dacian Wars

Early Roman art was influenced by the art of Greece and that of the neighbouring Etruscans, themselves greatly influenced by their Greek trading partners. An Etruscan speciality was near life size tomb effigies in terracotta, usually lying on top of a sarcophagus lid propped up on one elbow in the pose of a diner in that period. As the expanding Roman Republic began to conquer Greek territory, at first in Southern Italy and then the entire Hellenistic world except for the Parthian far east, official and patrician sculpture became largely an extension of the Hellenistic style, from which specifically Roman elements are hard to disentangle, especially as so much Greek sculpture survives only in copies of the Roman period.[35] By the 2nd century BC, "most of the sculptors working in Rome" were Greek,[36] often enslaved in conquests such as that of Corinth (146 BC), and sculptors continued to be mostly Greeks, often slaves, whose names are very rarely recorded. Vast numbers of Greek statues were imported to Rome, whether as booty or the result of extortion or commerce, and temples were often decorated with re-used Greek works.[37]

A native Italian style can be seen in the tomb monuments of prosperous middle-class Romans, which very often featured portrait busts, and portraiture is arguably the main strength of Roman sculpture. There are no survivals from the tradition of masks of ancestors that were worn in processions at the funerals of the great families and otherwise displayed in the home, but many of the busts that survive must represent ancestral figures, perhaps from the large family tombs like the Tomb of the Scipios or the later mausolea outside the city. The famous bronze head supposedly of Lucius Junius Brutus is very variously dated, but taken as a very rare survival of Italic style under the Republic, in the preferred medium of bronze.[38] Similarly stern and forceful heads are seen in the coins of the consuls, and in the Imperial period coins as well as busts sent around the Empire to be placed in the basilicas of provincial cities were the main visual form of imperial propaganda; even Londinium had a near-colossal statue of Nero, though far smaller than the 30-metre-high Colossus of Nero in Rome, now lost.[39] The Tomb of Eurysaces the Baker, a successful freedman (c. 50-20 BC) has a frieze that is an unusually large example of the "plebeian" style.[40] Imperial portraiture was initially Hellenized and highly idealized, as in the Blacas Cameo and other portraits of Augustus.

 
Arch of Constantine, 315: Hadrian lion-hunting (left) and sacrificing (right), above a section of the Constantinian frieze, showing the contrast of styles.

The Romans did not generally attempt to compete with free-standing Greek works of heroic exploits from history or mythology, but from early on produced historical works in relief, culminating in the great Roman triumphal columns with continuous narrative reliefs winding around them, of which those commemorating Trajan (113 AD) and Marcus Aurelius (by 193) survive in Rome, where the Ara Pacis ("Altar of Peace", 13 BC) represents the official Greco-Roman style at its most classical and refined, and the Sperlonga sculptures it at its most baroque. Some late Roman public sculptures developed a massive, simplified style that sometimes anticipates Soviet socialist realism. Among other major examples are the earlier re-used reliefs on the Arch of Constantine and the base of the Column of Antoninus Pius (161),[41] Campana reliefs were cheaper pottery versions of marble reliefs and the taste for relief was from the imperial period expanded to the sarcophagus.

All forms of luxury small sculpture continued to be patronized, and quality could be extremely high, as in the silver Warren Cup, glass Lycurgus Cup, and large cameos like the Gemma Augustea, Gonzaga Cameo and the "Great Cameo of France".[42] For a much wider section of the population, moulded relief decoration of pottery vessels and small figurines were produced in great quantity and often considerable quality.[43]

After moving through a late 2nd century "baroque" phase,[44] in the 3rd century, Roman art largely abandoned, or simply became unable to produce, sculpture in the classical tradition, a change whose causes remain much discussed. Even the most important imperial monuments now showed stumpy, large-eyed figures in a harsh frontal style, in simple compositions emphasizing power at the expense of grace. The contrast is famously illustrated in the Arch of Constantine of 315 in Rome, which combines sections in the new style with roundels in the earlier full Greco-Roman style taken from elsewhere, and the Four Tetrarchs (c. 305) from the new capital of Constantinople, now in Venice. Ernst Kitzinger found in both monuments the same "stubby proportions, angular movements, an ordering of parts through symmetry and repetition and a rendering of features and drapery folds through incisions rather than modelling... The hallmark of the style wherever it appears consists of an emphatic hardness, heaviness and angularity – in short, an almost complete rejection of the classical tradition".[45]

This revolution in style shortly preceded the period in which Christianity was adopted by the Roman state and the great majority of the people, leading to the end of large religious sculpture, with large statues now only used for emperors, as in the famous fragments of a colossal acrolithic statue of Constantine, and the 4th or 5th century Colossus of Barletta. However rich Christians continued to commission reliefs for sarcophagi, as in the Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus, and very small sculpture, especially in ivory, was continued by Christians, building on the style of the consular diptych.[46]

 
Bust of Antinous, c. 130 AD

Traditional Roman sculpture is divided into five categories: portraiture, historical relief, funerary reliefs, sarcophagi, and copies of ancient Greek works.[49] Contrary to the belief of early archaeologists, many of these sculptures were large polychrome terra-cotta images, such as the Apollo of Veii (Villa Givlia, Rome), but the painted surface of many of them has worn away with time.

Narrative reliefs

While Greek sculptors traditionally illustrated military exploits through the use of mythological allegory, the Romans used a more documentary style. Roman reliefs of battle scenes, like those on the Column of Trajan, were created for the glorification of Roman might, but also provide first-hand representation of military costumes and military equipment. Trajan's column records the various Dacian wars conducted by Trajan in what is modern day Romania. It is the foremost example of Roman historical relief and one of the great artistic treasures of the ancient world. This unprecedented achievement, over 650 foot of spiraling length, presents not just realistically rendered individuals (over 2,500 of them), but landscapes, animals, ships, and other elements in a continuous visual history – in effect an ancient precursor of a documentary movie. It survived destruction when it was adapted as a base for Christian sculpture.[50] During the Christian era after 300 AD, the decoration of door panels and sarcophagi continued but full-sized sculpture died out and did not appear to be an important element in early churches.[10]

Decorative arts

 
The Blacas Cameo of Augustus, from his last years or soon after

Pottery and terracottas

The Romans inherited a tradition of art in a wide range of the so-called "minor arts" or decorative art. Most of these flourished most impressively at the luxury level, but large numbers of terracotta figurines, both religious and secular, continued to be produced cheaply, as well as some larger Campana reliefs in terracotta.[51] Roman art did not use vase-painting in the way of the ancient Greeks, but vessels in Ancient Roman pottery were often stylishly decorated in moulded relief.[52] Producers of the millions of small oil lamps sold seem to have relied on attractive decoration to beat competitors and every subject of Roman art except landscape and portraiture is found on them in miniature.[53]

Glass

 

Luxury arts included fancy Roman glass in a great range of techniques, many smaller types of which were probably affordable to a good proportion of the Roman public. This was certainly not the case for the most extravagant types of glass, such as the cage cups or diatreta, of which the Lycurgus Cup in the British Museum is a near-unique figurative example in glass that changes colour when seen with light passing through it. The Augustan Portland Vase is the masterpiece of Roman cameo glass,[54] and imitated the style of the large engraved gems (Blacas Cameo, Gemma Augustea, Great Cameo of France) and other hardstone carvings that were also most popular around this time.[55]

Mosaic

 
Roman mosaic of female athletes playing ball at the Villa Romana del Casale of Piazza Armerina, Roman Sicily, 4th century AD

Roman mosaic was a minor art, though often on a very large scale, until the very end of the period, when late-4th-century Christians began to use it for large religious images on walls in their new large churches; in earlier Roman art mosaic was mainly used for floors, curved ceilings, and inside and outside walls that were going to get wet. The famous copy of a Hellenistic painting in the Alexander Mosaic in Naples was originally placed in a floor in Pompeii; this is much higher quality work than most Roman mosaic, though very fine panels, often of still life subjects in small or micromosaic tesserae have also survived. The Romans distinguished between normal opus tessellatum with tesserae mostly over 4 mm across, which was laid down on site, and finer opus vermiculatum for small panels, which is thought to have been produced offsite in a workshop, and brought to the site as a finished panel. The latter was a Hellenistic genre which is found in Italy between about 100 BC and 100 AD. Most signed mosaics have Greek names, suggesting the artists remained mostly Greek, though probably often slaves trained up in workshops. The late 2nd century BC Nile mosaic of Palestrina is a very large example of the popular genre of Nilotic landscape, while the 4th century Gladiator Mosaic in Rome shows several large figures in combat.[56] Orpheus mosaics, often very large, were another favourite subject for villas, with several ferocious animals tamed by Orpheus's playing music. In the transition to Byzantine art, hunting scenes tended to take over large animal scenes.

Metalwork

Metalwork was highly developed, and clearly an essential part of the homes of the rich, who dined off silver, while often drinking from glass, and had elaborate cast fittings on their furniture, jewellery, and small figurines. A number of important hoards found in the last 200 years, mostly from the more violent edges of the late empire, have given us a much clearer idea of Roman silver plate. The Mildenhall Treasure and Hoxne Hoard are both from East Anglia in England.[57] There are few survivals of upmarket ancient Roman furniture, but these show refined and elegant design and execution.

Coins and medals

 
Hadrian, with "RESTITVTORI ACHAIAE" on the reverse, celebrating his spending in Achaia (Greece), and showing the quality of ordinary bronze coins that were used by the mass population, hence the wear on higher areas.

Few Roman coins reach the artistic peaks of the best Greek coins, but they survive in vast numbers and their iconography and inscriptions form a crucial source for the study of Roman history, and the development of imperial iconography, as well as containing many fine examples of portraiture. They penetrated to the rural population of the whole Empire and beyond, with barbarians on the fringes of the Empire making their own copies. In the Empire medallions in precious metals began to be produced in small editions as imperial gifts, which are similar to coins, though larger and usually finer in execution. Images in coins initially followed Greek styles, with gods and symbols, but in the death throes of the Republic first Pompey and then Julius Caesar appeared on coins, and portraits of the emperor or members of his family became standard on imperial coinage. The inscriptions were used for propaganda, and in the later Empire the army joined the emperor as the beneficiary.

Architecture

It was in the area of architecture that Roman art produced its greatest innovations. Because the Roman Empire extended over so great of an area and included so many urbanized areas, Roman engineers developed methods for citybuilding on a grand scale, including the use of concrete. Massive buildings like the Pantheon and the Colosseum could never have been constructed with previous materials and methods. Though concrete had been invented a thousand years earlier in the Near East, the Romans extended its use from fortifications to their most impressive buildings and monuments, capitalizing on the material's strength and low cost.[58] The concrete core was covered with a plaster, brick, stone, or marble veneer, and decorative polychrome and gold-gilded sculpture was often added to produce a dazzling effect of power and wealth.[58]

Because of these methods, Roman architecture is legendary for the durability of its construction; with many buildings still standing, and some still in use, mostly buildings converted to churches during the Christian era. Many ruins, however, have been stripped of their marble veneer and are left with their concrete core exposed, thus appearing somewhat reduced in size and grandeur from their original appearance, such as with the Basilica of Constantine.[59]

During the Republican era, Roman architecture combined Greek and Etruscan elements, and produced innovations such as the round temple and the curved arch.[60] As Roman power grew in the early empire, the first emperors inaugurated wholesale leveling of slums to build grand palaces on the Palatine Hill and nearby areas, which required advances in engineering methods and large scale design. Roman buildings were then built in the commercial, political, and social grouping known as a forum, that of Julius Caesar being the first and several added later, with the Forum Romanum being the most famous. The greatest arena in the Roman world, the Colosseum, was completed around 80 AD at the far end of that forum. It held over 50,000 spectators, had retractable fabric coverings for shade, and could stage massive spectacles including huge gladiatorial contests and mock naval battles. This masterpiece of Roman architecture epitomizes Roman engineering efficiency and incorporates all three architectural orders – Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian.[61] Less celebrated but just as important if not more so for most Roman citizens, was the five-story insula or city block, the Roman equivalent of an apartment building, which housed tens of thousands of Romans.[62]

 
Roman theatre in Mérida

It was during the reign of Trajan (98–117 AD) and Hadrian (117–138 AD) that the Roman Empire reached its greatest extent and that Rome itself was at the peak of its artistic glory – achieved through massive building programs of monuments, meeting houses, gardens, aqueducts, baths, palaces, pavilions, sarcophagi, and temples.[50] The Roman use of the arch, the use of concrete building methods, the use of the dome all permitted construction of vaulted ceilings and enabled the building of these public spaces and complexes, including the palaces, public baths and basilicas of the "Golden Age" of the empire. Outstanding examples of dome construction include the Pantheon, the Baths of Diocletian, and the Baths of Caracalla. The Pantheon (dedicated to all the planetary gods) is the best preserved temple of ancient times with an intact ceiling featuring an open "eye" in the center. The height of the ceiling exactly equals the interior radius of the building, creating a hemispherical enclosure.[59] These grand buildings later served as inspirational models for architects of the Italian Renaissance, such as Brunelleschi. By the age of Constantine (306-337 AD), the last great building programs in Rome took place, including the erection of the Arch of Constantine built near the Colosseum, which recycled some stone work from the forum nearby, to produce an eclectic mix of styles.[13]

Roman aqueducts, also based on the arch, were commonplace in the empire and essential transporters of water to large urban areas. Their standing masonry remains are especially impressive, such as the Pont du Gard (featuring three tiers of arches) and the aqueduct of Segovia, serving as mute testimony to their quality of their design and construction.[61]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Toynbee, J. M. C. (1971). "Roman Art". The Classical Review. 21 (3): 439–442. doi:10.1017/S0009840X00221331. JSTOR 708631. S2CID 163488573.
  2. ^ Sybille Ebert-Schifferer, Still Life: A History, Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1998, p. 15, ISBN 0-8109-4190-2
  3. ^ Ebert-Schifferer, p. 16
  4. ^ a b Piper, p. 252
  5. ^ a b c Janson, p. 158
  6. ^ Piper, p. 248–253
  7. ^ Piper, p. 255
  8. ^ a b c d Piper, p. 253
  9. ^ Piper, p. 254
  10. ^ a b Piper, p. 261
  11. ^ Piper, p. 266
  12. ^ a b c Janson, p. 190
  13. ^ a b Piper, p. 260
  14. ^ Janson, p. 191
  15. ^ according to Ernst Gombrich.
  16. ^ Plato. Critias (107b–108b), trans W.R.M. Lamb 1925. at the Perseus Project accessed 27 June 2006
  17. ^ Janson, p. 192
  18. ^ John Hope-Hennessy, The Portrait in the Renaissance, Bollingen Foundation, New York, 1966, pp. 71–72
  19. ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History XXXV:2 trans H. Rackham 1952. Loeb Classical Library
  20. ^ Janson, p. 194
  21. ^ Janson, p. 195
  22. ^ a b Daniel Thomas Howells (2015). "A Catalogue of the Late Antique Gold Glass in the British Museum (PDF)." London: the British Museum (Arts and Humanities Research Council). Accessed 2 October 2016, p. 7: "Other important contributions to scholarship included the publication of an extensive summary of gold glass scholarship under the entry ‘Fonds de coupes’ in Fernand Cabrol and Henri Leclercq’s comprehensive Dictionnaire d’archéologie chrétienne et de liturgie in 1923. Leclercq updated Vopel’s catalogue, recording 512 gold glasses considered to be genuine, and developed a typological series consisting of eleven iconographic subjects: biblical subjects; Christ and the saints; various legends; inscriptions; pagan deities; secular subjects; male portraits; female portraits; portraits of couples and families; animals; and Jewish symbols. In a 1926 article devoted to the brushed technique gold glass known as the Brescia medallion (Pl. 1), Fernand de Mély challenged the deeply ingrained opinion of Garrucci and Vopel that all examples of brushed technique gold glass were in fact forgeries. The following year, de Mély’s hypothesis was supported and further elaborated upon in two articles by different scholars. A case for the Brescia medallion’s authenticity was argued for, not on the basis of its iconographic and orthographic similarity with pieces from Rome (a key reason for Garrucci's dismissal), but instead for its close similarity to the Fayoum mummy portraits from Egypt. Indeed, this comparison was given further credence by Walter Crum’s assertion that the Greek inscription on the medallion was written in the Alexandrian dialect of Egypt. De Mély noted that the medallion and its inscription had been reported as early as 1725, far too early for the idiosyncrasies of Graeco-Egyptian word endings to have been understood by forgers." "Comparing the iconography of the Brescia medallion with other more closely dated objects from Egypt, Hayford Peirce then proposed that brushed technique medallions were produced in the early 3rd century, whilst de Mély himself advocated a more general 3rd-century date. With the authenticity of the medallion more firmly established, Joseph Breck was prepared to propose a late 3rd to early 4th century date for all of the brushed technique cobalt blue-backed portrait medallions, some of which also had Greek inscriptions in the Alexandrian dialect. Although considered genuine by the majority of scholars by this point, the unequivocal authenticity of these glasses was not fully established until 1941 when Gerhart Ladner discovered and published a photograph of one such medallion still in situ, where it remains to this day, impressed into the plaster sealing in an individual loculus in the Catacomb of Panfilo in Rome (Pl. 2). Shortly after in 1942, Morey used the phrase ‘brushed technique’ to categorize this gold glass type, the iconography being produced through a series of small incisions undertaken with a gem cutter’s precision and lending themselves to a chiaroscuro-like effect similar to that of a fine steel engraving simulating brush strokes."
  23. ^ Beckwith, 25-26,
  24. ^ Grig, throughout
  25. ^ Honour and Fleming, Pt 2, "The Catacombs" at illustration 7.7
  26. ^ Weitzmann, no. 264, entry by J.D.B.; see also no. 265; Medallion with a Portrait of Gennadios, Metropolitan Museum of Art, with better image.
  27. ^ Boardman, 338-340; Beckwith, 25
  28. ^ Vickers, 611
  29. ^ Grig, 207
  30. ^ Jás Elsner (2007). "The Changing Nature of Roman Art and the Art Historical Problem of Style," in Eva R. Hoffman (ed), Late Antique and Medieval Art of the Medieval World, 11-18. Oxford, Malden & Carlton: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-2071-5, p. 17, Figure 1.3 on p. 18.
  31. ^ Sines and Sakellarakis, 194-195
  32. ^ Grig, 207; Lutraan, 29-45 goes into considerable detail
  33. ^ Natural History (Pliny) online at the Perseus Project
  34. ^ Josephus, The Jewish Wars VII, 143-152 (Ch 6 Para 5). Trans. William Whiston Online accessed 27 June 2006
  35. ^ Strong, 58–63; Henig, 66-69
  36. ^ Henig, 24
  37. ^ Henig, 66–69; Strong, 36–39, 48; At the trial of Verres, former governor of Sicily, Cicero's prosecution details his depredations of art collections at great length.
  38. ^ Henig, 23–24
  39. ^ Henig, 66–71
  40. ^ Henig, 66; Strong, 125
  41. ^ Henig, 73–82;Strong, 48–52, 80–83, 108–117, 128–132, 141–159, 177–182, 197–211
  42. ^ Henig, Chapter 6; Strong, 303–315
  43. ^ Henig, Chapter 8
  44. ^ Strong, 171–176, 211–214
  45. ^ Kitzinger, 9 (both quotes), more generally his Ch 1; Strong, 250–257, 264–266, 272–280
  46. ^ Strong, 287–291, 305–308, 315–318; Henig, 234–240
  47. ^ D.B. Saddington (2011) [2007]. "the Evolution of the Roman Imperial Fleets," in Paul Erdkamp (ed), A Companion to the Roman Army, 201-217. Malden, Oxford, Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-2153-8. Plate 12.2 on p. 204.
  48. ^ Coarelli, Filippo (1987), I Santuari del Lazio in età repubblicana. NIS, Rome, pp 35-84.
  49. ^ Gazda, Elaine K. (1995). "Roman Sculpture and the Ethos of Emulation: Reconsidering Repetition". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. Department of the Classics, Harvard University. 97 (Greece in Rome: Influence, Integration, Resistance): 121–156. doi:10.2307/311303. JSTOR 311303. According to traditional art-historical taxonomy, Roman sculpture is divided into a number of distinct categories--portraiture, historical relief, funerary reliefs, sarcophagi, and copies.
  50. ^ a b Piper, p. 256
  51. ^ Henig, 191-199
  52. ^ Henig, 179-187
  53. ^ Henig, 200-204
  54. ^ Henig, 215-218
  55. ^ Henig, 152-158
  56. ^ Henig, 116-138
  57. ^ Henig, 140-150; jewellery, 158-160
  58. ^ a b Janson, p. 160
  59. ^ a b Janson, p. 165
  60. ^ Janson, p. 159
  61. ^ a b Janson, p. 162
  62. ^ Janson, p. 167

Sources

  • Beckwith, John. Early Christian and Byzantine Art. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1970.
  • Boardman, John, The Oxford History of Classical Art. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993.
  • Grig, Lucy. “Portraits, pontiffs and the Christianization of fourth-century Rome.” Papers of the British School at Rome 72 (2004): 203–379.
  • --. Roman Art, Religion and Society: New Studies From the Roman Art Seminar, Oxford 2005. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2006.
  • Janson, H. W., and Anthony F Janson. History of Art. 6th ed. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2001.
  • Kitzinger, Ernst. Byzantine Art In the Making: Main Lines of Stylistic Development In Mediterranean Art, 3rd-7th Century. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995.
  • Henig, Martin. A Handbook of Roman Art: A Comprehensive Survey of All the Arts of the Roman World. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983.
  • Piper, David. The Illustrated Library of Art, Portland House, New York, 1986, ISBN 0-517-62336-6
  • Strong, Donald Emrys, J. M. C Toynbee, and Roger Ling. Roman Art. 2nd ed. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1988.

Further reading

  • Andreae, Bernard. The Art of Rome. New York: H. N. Abrams, 1977.
  • Beard, Mary, and John Henderson. Classical Art: From Greece to Rome. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.
  • Bianchi Bandinelli, Ranuccio. Rome, the Center of Power: 500 B.C. to A.D. 200. New York: G. Braziller, 1970.
  • Borg, Barbara. A Companion to Roman Art. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons, 2015.
  • Brilliant, Richard. Roman Art From the Republic to Constantine. Newton Abbot, Devon: Phaidon Press, 1974.
  • D’Ambra, Eve. Art and Identity in the Roman World. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1998.
  • --. Roman Art. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
  • Kleiner, Fred S. A History of Roman Art. Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth, 2007.
  • Ramage, Nancy H. Roman Art: Romulus to Constantine. 6th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ : Pearson, 2015.
  • Stewart, Peter. Roman Art. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.
  • Syndicus, Eduard. Early Christian Art. 1st ed. New York: Hawthorn Books, 1962.
  • Tuck, Steven L. A History of Roman Art. Malden: Wiley Blackwell, 2015.
  • Zanker, Paul. Roman Art. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2010.

External links

  • Roman Art - World History Encyclopedia
  • Ancient Rome Art History Resources
  • Dissolution and Becoming in Roman Wall-Painting

roman, ancient, rome, territories, republic, later, empire, includes, architecture, painting, sculpture, mosaic, work, luxury, objects, metal, work, engraving, ivory, carvings, glass, sometimes, considered, minor, forms, although, they, were, considered, such,. The art of Ancient Rome and the territories of its Republic and later Empire includes architecture painting sculpture and mosaic work Luxury objects in metal work gem engraving ivory carvings and glass are sometimes considered to be minor forms of Roman art 1 although they were not considered as such at the time Sculpture was perhaps considered as the highest form of art by Romans but figure painting was also highly regarded A very large body of sculpture has survived from about the 1st century BC onward though very little from before but very little painting remains and probably nothing that a contemporary would have considered to be of the highest quality Roman artFresco from the Villa of the Mysteries Pompeii 80 BC Ancient Roman pottery was not a luxury product but a vast production of fine wares in terra sigillata were decorated with reliefs that reflected the latest taste and provided a large group in society with stylish objects at what was evidently an affordable price Roman coins were an important means of propaganda and have survived in enormous numbers Contents 1 Introduction 2 Painting 2 1 Variety of subjects 2 2 Landscape and vistas 2 3 Still life 2 4 Portraits 2 5 Gold glass 2 6 Genre scenes 2 7 Triumphal paintings 3 Sculpture 3 1 Narrative reliefs 4 Decorative arts 4 1 Pottery and terracottas 4 2 Glass 4 3 Mosaic 4 4 Metalwork 4 5 Coins and medals 5 Architecture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksIntroduction Edit Left image A Roman fresco from Pompeii showing a Maenad in silk dress 1st century ADRight image A fresco of a young man from the Villa di Arianna Stabiae 1st century AD Further information Roman Republican art While the traditional view of the ancient Roman artists is that they often borrowed from and copied Greek precedents much of the Greek sculptures known today are in the form of Roman marble copies more of recent analysis has indicated that Roman art is a highly creative pastiche relying heavily on Greek models but also encompassing Etruscan native Italic and even Egyptian visual culture Stylistic eclecticism and practical application are the hallmarks of much Roman art Pliny Ancient Rome s most important historian concerning the arts recorded that nearly all the forms of art sculpture landscape portrait painting even genre painting were advanced in Greek times and in some cases more advanced than in Rome Though very little remains of Greek wall art and portraiture certainly Greek sculpture and vase painting bears this out These forms were not likely surpassed by Roman artists in fineness of design or execution As another example of the lost Golden Age he singled out Peiraikos whose artistry is surpassed by only a very few He painted barbershops and shoemakers stalls donkeys vegetables and such and for that reason came to be called the painter of vulgar subjects yet these works are altogether delightful and they were sold at higher prices than the greatest paintings of many other artists 2 The adjective vulgar is used here in its original definition which means common The Greek antecedents of Roman art were legendary In the mid 5th century BC the most famous Greek artists were Polygnotos noted for his wall murals and Apollodoros the originator of chiaroscuro The development of realistic technique is credited to Zeuxis and Parrhasius who according to ancient Greek legend are said to have once competed in a bravura display of their talents history s earliest descriptions of trompe l œil painting 3 In sculpture Skopas Praxiteles Phidias and Lysippos were the foremost sculptors It appears that Roman artists had much Ancient Greek art to copy from as trade in art was brisk throughout the empire and much of the Greek artistic heritage found its way into Roman art through books and teaching Ancient Greek treatises on the arts are known to have existed in Roman times though are now lost 4 Many Roman artists came from Greek colonies and provinces 5 A Roman fresco depicting Amphion and Zethus subject Dirce to the bull from the House of the Vettii Pompeii Preparation of an animal sacrifice marble fragment of an architectural relief first quarter of the 2nd century CE from Rome Italy The high number of Roman copies of Greek art also speaks of the esteem Roman artists had for Greek art and perhaps of its rarer and higher quality 5 Many of the art forms and methods used by the Romans such as high and low relief free standing sculpture bronze casting vase art mosaic cameo coin art fine jewelry and metalwork funerary sculpture perspective drawing caricature genre and portrait painting landscape painting architectural sculpture and trompe l œil painting all were developed or refined by Ancient Greek artists 6 One exception is the Roman bust which did not include the shoulders The traditional head and shoulders bust may have been an Etruscan or early Roman form 7 Virtually every artistic technique and method used by Renaissance artists 1 900 years later had been demonstrated by Ancient Greek artists with the notable exceptions of oil colors and mathematically accurate perspective 8 Where Greek artists were highly revered in their society most Roman artists were anonymous and considered tradesmen There is no recording as in Ancient Greece of the great masters of Roman art and practically no signed works Where Greeks worshipped the aesthetic qualities of great art and wrote extensively on artistic theory Roman art was more decorative and indicative of status and wealth and apparently not the subject of scholars or philosophers 9 Owing in part to the fact that the Roman cities were far larger than the Greek city states in power and population and generally less provincial art in Ancient Rome took on a wider and sometimes more utilitarian purpose Roman culture assimilated many cultures and was for the most part tolerant of the ways of conquered peoples 5 Roman art was commissioned displayed and owned in far greater quantities and adapted to more uses than in Greek times Wealthy Romans were more materialistic they decorated their walls with art their home with decorative objects and themselves with fine jewelry In the Christian era of the late Empire from 350 to 500 CE wall painting mosaic ceiling and floor work and funerary sculpture thrived while full sized sculpture in the round and panel painting died out most likely for religious reasons 10 When Constantine moved the capital of the empire to Byzantium renamed Constantinople Roman art incorporated Eastern influences to produce the Byzantine style of the late empire When Rome was sacked in the 5th century artisans moved to and found work in the Eastern capital The Church of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople employed nearly 10 000 workmen and artisans in a final burst of Roman art under Emperor Justinian 527 565 CE who also ordered the creation of the famous mosaics of Basilica of San Vitale in the city of Ravenna 11 Painting EditMain article Pompeian Styles Further information Encaustic painting Female painter sitting on a campstool and painting a statue of Dionysus or Priapus onto a panel which is held by a boy Fresco from Pompeii 1st century Of the vast body of Roman painting we now have only a very few pockets of survivals with many documented types not surviving at all or doing so only from the very end of the period The best known and most important pocket is the wall paintings from Pompeii Herculaneum and other sites nearby which show how residents of a wealthy seaside resort decorated their walls in the century or so before the fatal eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD A succession of dated styles have been defined and analysed by modern art historians beginning with August Mau showing increasing elaboration and sophistication Heracles and Omphale Roman fresco Pompeian Fourth Style 45 79 AD Naples National Archaeological Museum Italy Starting in the 3rd century AD and finishing by about 400 we have a large body of paintings from the Catacombs of Rome by no means all Christian showing the later continuation of the domestic decorative tradition in a version adapted probably not greatly adapted for use in burial chambers in what was probably a rather humbler social milieu than the largest houses in Pompeii Much of Nero s palace in Rome the Domus Aurea survived as grottos and gives us examples which we can be sure represent the very finest quality of wall painting in its style and which may well have represented significant innovation in style There are a number of other parts of painted rooms surviving from Rome and elsewhere which somewhat help to fill in the gaps of our knowledge of wall painting From Roman Egypt there are a large number of what are known as Fayum mummy portraits bust portraits on wood added to the outside of mummies by a Romanized middle class despite their very distinct local character they are probably broadly representative of Roman style in painted portraits which are otherwise entirely lost Nothing remains of the Greek paintings imported to Rome during the 4th and 5th centuries or of the painting on wood done in Italy during that period 4 In sum the range of samples is confined to only about 200 years out of the about 900 years of Roman history 12 and of provincial and decorative painting Most of this wall painting was done using the a secco dry method but some fresco paintings also existed in Roman times There is evidence from mosaics and a few inscriptions that some Roman paintings were adaptations or copies of earlier Greek works 12 However adding to the confusion is the fact that inscriptions may be recording the names of immigrant Greek artists from Roman times not from Ancient Greek originals that were copied 8 The Romans entirely lacked a tradition of figurative vase painting comparable to that of the Ancient Greeks which the Etruscans had emulated Variety of subjects Edit The Wedding of Zephyrus and Chloris 54 68 AD Pompeian Fourth Style within painted architectural panels from the Casa del Naviglio Roman painting provides a wide variety of themes animals still life scenes from everyday life portraits and some mythological subjects During the Hellenistic period it evoked the pleasures of the countryside and represented scenes of shepherds herds rustic temples rural mountainous landscapes and country houses 8 Erotic scenes are also relatively common In the late empire after 200AD early Christian themes mixed with pagan imagery survive on catacomb walls 13 Landscape and vistas Edit Boscotrecase Pompeii Third style The main innovation of Roman painting compared to Greek art was the development of landscapes in particular incorporating techniques of perspective though true mathematical perspective developed 1 500 years later Surface textures shading and coloration are well applied but scale and spatial depth was still not rendered accurately Some landscapes were pure scenes of nature particularly gardens with flowers and trees while others were architectural vistas depicting urban buildings Other landscapes show episodes from mythology the most famous demonstrating scenes from the Odyssey 14 In the cultural point of view the art of the ancient East would have known landscape painting only as the backdrop to civil or military narrative scenes 15 This theory is defended by Franz Wickhoff is debatable It is possible to see evidence of Greek knowledge of landscape portrayal in Plato s Critias 107b 108b and if we look at the portraiture of divine and of human bodies as executed by painters in respect of the ease or difficulty with which they succeed in imitating their subjects in the opinion of onlookers we shall notice in the first place that as regards the earth and mountains and rivers and woods and the whole of heaven with the things that exist and move therein we are content if a man is able to represent them with even a small degree of likeness 16 Still life Edit Roman still life subjects are often placed in illusionist niches or shelves and depict a variety of everyday objects including fruit live and dead animals seafood and shells Examples of the theme of the glass jar filled with water were skillfully painted and later served as models for the same subject often painted during the Renaissance and Baroque periods 17 Portraits Edit Further information Roman portraiture The Severan Tondo a panel painting of the imperial family c 200 AD Antikensammlung Berlin Fayum mummy portrait of a woman from Roman Egypt with a ringlet hairstyle Royal Museum of Scotland Pliny complained of the declining state of Roman portrait art The painting of portraits which used to transmit through the ages the accurate likenesses of people has entirely gone out Indolence has destroyed the arts 18 19 In Greece and Rome wall painting was not considered as high art The most prestigious form of art besides sculpture was panel painting i e tempera or encaustic painting on wooden panels Unfortunately since wood is a perishable material only a very few examples of such paintings have survived namely the Severan Tondo from c 200 AD a very routine official portrait from some provincial government office and the well known Fayum mummy portraits all from Roman Egypt and almost certainly not of the highest contemporary quality The portraits were attached to burial mummies at the face from which almost all have now been detached They usually depict a single person showing the head or head and upper chest viewed frontally The background is always monochrome sometimes with decorative elements 20 In terms of artistic tradition the images clearly derive more from Greco Roman traditions than Egyptian ones They are remarkably realistic though variable in artistic quality and may indicate that similar art which was widespread elsewhere but did not survive A few portraits painted on glass and medals from the later empire have survived as have coin portraits some of which are considered very realistic as well 21 Gold glass Edit Main article Gold glass Further information List of gold glass portraits Detail of the gold glass medallion in Brescia Museo di Santa Giulia most likely Alexandrian 3rd century AD 22 Gold glass or gold sandwich glass was a technique for fixing a layer of gold leaf with a design between two fused layers of glass developed in Hellenistic glass and revived in the 3rd century AD There are a very few large designs including a very fine group of portraits from the 3rd century with added paint but the great majority of the around 500 survivals are roundels that are the cut off bottoms of wine cups or glasses used to mark and decorate graves in the Catacombs of Rome by pressing them into the mortar They predominantly date from the 4th and 5th centuries Most are Christian though there are many pagan and a few Jewish examples It is likely that they were originally given as gifts on marriage or festive occasions such as New Year Their iconography has been much studied although artistically they are relatively unsophisticated 23 Their subjects are similar to the catacomb paintings but with a difference balance including more portraiture As time went on there was an increase in the depiction of saints 24 The same technique began to be used for gold tesserae for mosaics in the mid 1st century in Rome and by the 5th century these had become the standard background for religious mosaics The earlier group are among the most vivid portraits to survive from Early Christian times They stare out at us with an extraordinary stern and melancholy intensity 25 and represent the best surviving indications of what high quality Roman portraiture could achieve in paint The Gennadios medallion in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is a fine example of an Alexandrian portrait on blue glass using a rather more complex technique and naturalistic style than most Late Roman examples including painting onto the gold to create shading and with the Greek inscription showing local dialect features He had perhaps been given or commissioned the piece to celebrate victory in a musical competition 26 One of the most famous Alexandrian style portrait medallions with an inscription in Egyptian Greek was later mounted in an Early Medieval crux gemmata in Brescia in the mistaken belief that it showed the pious empress and Gothic queen Galla Placida and her children 27 in fact the knot in the central figure s dress may mark a devotee of Isis 28 This is one of a group of 14 pieces dating to the 3rd century AD all individualized secular portraits of high quality 29 The inscription on the medallion is written in the Alexandrian dialect of Greek and hence most likely depicts a family from Roman Egypt 30 The medallion has also been compared to other works of contemporaneous Roman Egyptian artwork such as the Fayum mummy portraits 22 It is thought that the tiny detail of pieces such as these can only have been achieved using lenses 31 The later glasses from the catacombs have a level of portraiture that is rudimentary with features hairstyles and clothes all following stereotypical styles 32 Genre scenes Edit Roman genre scenes generally depict Romans at leisure and include gambling music and sexual encounters citation needed Some scenes depict gods and goddesses at leisure 8 12 Triumphal paintings Edit Roman fresco from the Villa Boscoreale 43 30 BC Metropolitan Museum of Art Roman fresco with a banquet scene from the Casa dei Casti Amanti Pompeii From the 3rd century BC a specific genre known as Triumphal Paintings appeared as indicated by Pliny XXXV 22 33 These were paintings which showed triumphal entries after military victories represented episodes from the war and conquered regions and cities Summary maps were drawn to highlight key points of the campaign Josephus describes the painting executed on the occasion of Vespasian and Titus s sack of Jerusalem There was also wrought gold and ivory fastened about them all and many resemblances of the war and those in several ways and variety of contrivances affording a most lively portraiture of itself For there was to be seen a happy country laid waste and entire squadrons of enemies slain while some of them ran away and some were carried into captivity with walls of great altitude and magnitude overthrown and ruined by machines with the strongest fortifications taken and the walls of most populous cities upon the tops of hills seized on and an army pouring itself within the walls as also every place full of slaughter and supplications of the enemies when they were no longer able to lift up their hands in way of opposition Fire also sent upon temples was here represented and houses overthrown and falling upon their owners rivers also after they came out of a large and melancholy desert ran down not into a land cultivated nor as drink for men or for cattle but through a land still on fire upon every side for the Jews related that such a thing they had undergone during this war Now the workmanship of these representations was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it as if they had been there really present On the top of every one of these pageants was placed the commander of the city that was taken and the manner wherein he was taken 34 These paintings have disappeared but they likely influenced the composition of the historical reliefs carved on military sarcophagi the Arch of Titus and Trajan s Column This evidence underscores the significance of landscape painting which sometimes tended towards being perspective plans Ranuccio also describes the oldest painting to be found in Rome in a tomb on the Esquiline Hill It describes a historical scene on a clear background painted in four superimposed sections Several people are identified such Marcus Fannius and Marcus Fabius These are larger than the other figures In the second zone to the left is a city encircled with crenellated walls in front of which is a large warrior equipped with an oval buckler and a feathered helmet near him is a man in a short tunic armed with a spear Around these two are smaller soldiers in short tunics armed with spears In the lower zone a battle is taking place where a warrior with oval buckler and a feathered helmet is shown larger than the others whose weapons allow to assume that these are probably Samnites This episode is difficult to pinpoint One of Ranuccio s hypotheses is that it refers to a victory of the consul Fabius Maximus Rullianus during the second war against Samnites in 326 BC The presentation of the figures with sizes proportional to their importance is typically Roman and finds itself in plebeian reliefs This painting is in the infancy of triumphal painting and would have been accomplished by the beginning of the 3rd century BC to decorate the tomb Sculpture EditMain articles Roman sculpture and Roman portraiture Detail from the Ahenobarbus relief showing two Roman soldiers c 122 BC Section of Trajan s Column 113 AD with scenes from the Dacian Wars Early Roman art was influenced by the art of Greece and that of the neighbouring Etruscans themselves greatly influenced by their Greek trading partners An Etruscan speciality was near life size tomb effigies in terracotta usually lying on top of a sarcophagus lid propped up on one elbow in the pose of a diner in that period As the expanding Roman Republic began to conquer Greek territory at first in Southern Italy and then the entire Hellenistic world except for the Parthian far east official and patrician sculpture became largely an extension of the Hellenistic style from which specifically Roman elements are hard to disentangle especially as so much Greek sculpture survives only in copies of the Roman period 35 By the 2nd century BC most of the sculptors working in Rome were Greek 36 often enslaved in conquests such as that of Corinth 146 BC and sculptors continued to be mostly Greeks often slaves whose names are very rarely recorded Vast numbers of Greek statues were imported to Rome whether as booty or the result of extortion or commerce and temples were often decorated with re used Greek works 37 A native Italian style can be seen in the tomb monuments of prosperous middle class Romans which very often featured portrait busts and portraiture is arguably the main strength of Roman sculpture There are no survivals from the tradition of masks of ancestors that were worn in processions at the funerals of the great families and otherwise displayed in the home but many of the busts that survive must represent ancestral figures perhaps from the large family tombs like the Tomb of the Scipios or the later mausolea outside the city The famous bronze head supposedly of Lucius Junius Brutus is very variously dated but taken as a very rare survival of Italic style under the Republic in the preferred medium of bronze 38 Similarly stern and forceful heads are seen in the coins of the consuls and in the Imperial period coins as well as busts sent around the Empire to be placed in the basilicas of provincial cities were the main visual form of imperial propaganda even Londinium had a near colossal statue of Nero though far smaller than the 30 metre high Colossus of Nero in Rome now lost 39 The Tomb of Eurysaces the Baker a successful freedman c 50 20 BC has a frieze that is an unusually large example of the plebeian style 40 Imperial portraiture was initially Hellenized and highly idealized as in the Blacas Cameo and other portraits of Augustus Arch of Constantine 315 Hadrian lion hunting left and sacrificing right above a section of the Constantinian frieze showing the contrast of styles The Romans did not generally attempt to compete with free standing Greek works of heroic exploits from history or mythology but from early on produced historical works in relief culminating in the great Roman triumphal columns with continuous narrative reliefs winding around them of which those commemorating Trajan 113 AD and Marcus Aurelius by 193 survive in Rome where the Ara Pacis Altar of Peace 13 BC represents the official Greco Roman style at its most classical and refined and the Sperlonga sculptures it at its most baroque Some late Roman public sculptures developed a massive simplified style that sometimes anticipates Soviet socialist realism Among other major examples are the earlier re used reliefs on the Arch of Constantine and the base of the Column of Antoninus Pius 161 41 Campana reliefs were cheaper pottery versions of marble reliefs and the taste for relief was from the imperial period expanded to the sarcophagus All forms of luxury small sculpture continued to be patronized and quality could be extremely high as in the silver Warren Cup glass Lycurgus Cup and large cameos like the Gemma Augustea Gonzaga Cameo and the Great Cameo of France 42 For a much wider section of the population moulded relief decoration of pottery vessels and small figurines were produced in great quantity and often considerable quality 43 After moving through a late 2nd century baroque phase 44 in the 3rd century Roman art largely abandoned or simply became unable to produce sculpture in the classical tradition a change whose causes remain much discussed Even the most important imperial monuments now showed stumpy large eyed figures in a harsh frontal style in simple compositions emphasizing power at the expense of grace The contrast is famously illustrated in the Arch of Constantine of 315 in Rome which combines sections in the new style with roundels in the earlier full Greco Roman style taken from elsewhere and the Four Tetrarchs c 305 from the new capital of Constantinople now in Venice Ernst Kitzinger found in both monuments the same stubby proportions angular movements an ordering of parts through symmetry and repetition and a rendering of features and drapery folds through incisions rather than modelling The hallmark of the style wherever it appears consists of an emphatic hardness heaviness and angularity in short an almost complete rejection of the classical tradition 45 This revolution in style shortly preceded the period in which Christianity was adopted by the Roman state and the great majority of the people leading to the end of large religious sculpture with large statues now only used for emperors as in the famous fragments of a colossal acrolithic statue of Constantine and the 4th or 5th century Colossus of Barletta However rich Christians continued to commission reliefs for sarcophagi as in the Sarcophagus of Junius Bassus and very small sculpture especially in ivory was continued by Christians building on the style of the consular diptych 46 Etruscan sarcophagus 3rd century BC The Capitoline Brutus dated to the 4th to 3rd centuries BC A Roman naval bireme depicted in a relief from the Temple of Fortuna Primigenia in Praeneste Palastrina 47 which was built c 120 BC 48 exhibited in the Pius Clementine Museum Museo Pio Clementino in the Vatican Museums The Orator c 100 BC an Etrusco Roman bronze statue depicting Aule Metele Latin Aulus Metellus an Etruscan man wearing a Roman toga while engaged in rhetoric the statue features an inscription in the Etruscan alphabet The Grave relief of Publius Aiedius and Aiedia 30 BC Pergamon Museum Berlin Augustus of Prima Porta statue of the emperor Augustus 1st century AD Vatican Museums Tomb relief of the Decii 98 117 AD Bust of Emperor Claudius c 50 CE reworked from a bust of emperor Caligula Vatican Museums Commodus dressed as Hercules c 191 CE in the late imperial baroque style Capitoline Museum Rome The Four Tetrarchs c 305 showing the new anti classical style in porphyry now San Marco Venice The cameo gem known as the Great Cameo of France c 23 AD with an allegory of Augustus and his family Portrait Bust of a Man Ancient Rome 60 BC Roman portraiture is characterized by its warts and all realism Veristic portrait bust of an old man head covered capite velato either a priest or paterfamilias marble mid 1st century BC Bust of Antinous c 130 AD Traditional Roman sculpture is divided into five categories portraiture historical relief funerary reliefs sarcophagi and copies of ancient Greek works 49 Contrary to the belief of early archaeologists many of these sculptures were large polychrome terra cotta images such as the Apollo of Veii Villa Givlia Rome but the painted surface of many of them has worn away with time Narrative reliefs Edit While Greek sculptors traditionally illustrated military exploits through the use of mythological allegory the Romans used a more documentary style Roman reliefs of battle scenes like those on the Column of Trajan were created for the glorification of Roman might but also provide first hand representation of military costumes and military equipment Trajan s column records the various Dacian wars conducted by Trajan in what is modern day Romania It is the foremost example of Roman historical relief and one of the great artistic treasures of the ancient world This unprecedented achievement over 650 foot of spiraling length presents not just realistically rendered individuals over 2 500 of them but landscapes animals ships and other elements in a continuous visual history in effect an ancient precursor of a documentary movie It survived destruction when it was adapted as a base for Christian sculpture 50 During the Christian era after 300 AD the decoration of door panels and sarcophagi continued but full sized sculpture died out and did not appear to be an important element in early churches 10 Decorative arts Edit The Blacas Cameo of Augustus from his last years or soon after Pottery and terracottas Edit Main articles Ancient Roman pottery and Campana relief The Romans inherited a tradition of art in a wide range of the so called minor arts or decorative art Most of these flourished most impressively at the luxury level but large numbers of terracotta figurines both religious and secular continued to be produced cheaply as well as some larger Campana reliefs in terracotta 51 Roman art did not use vase painting in the way of the ancient Greeks but vessels in Ancient Roman pottery were often stylishly decorated in moulded relief 52 Producers of the millions of small oil lamps sold seem to have relied on attractive decoration to beat competitors and every subject of Roman art except landscape and portraiture is found on them in miniature 53 Glass Edit Main article Roman glass Various Roman glasswares on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Luxury arts included fancy Roman glass in a great range of techniques many smaller types of which were probably affordable to a good proportion of the Roman public This was certainly not the case for the most extravagant types of glass such as the cage cups or diatreta of which the Lycurgus Cup in the British Museum is a near unique figurative example in glass that changes colour when seen with light passing through it The Augustan Portland Vase is the masterpiece of Roman cameo glass 54 and imitated the style of the large engraved gems Blacas Cameo Gemma Augustea Great Cameo of France and other hardstone carvings that were also most popular around this time 55 Mosaic Edit Main article Roman mosaic Roman mosaic of female athletes playing ball at the Villa Romana del Casale of Piazza Armerina Roman Sicily 4th century AD Roman mosaic was a minor art though often on a very large scale until the very end of the period when late 4th century Christians began to use it for large religious images on walls in their new large churches in earlier Roman art mosaic was mainly used for floors curved ceilings and inside and outside walls that were going to get wet The famous copy of a Hellenistic painting in the Alexander Mosaic in Naples was originally placed in a floor in Pompeii this is much higher quality work than most Roman mosaic though very fine panels often of still life subjects in small or micromosaic tesserae have also survived The Romans distinguished between normal opus tessellatum with tesserae mostly over 4 mm across which was laid down on site and finer opus vermiculatum for small panels which is thought to have been produced offsite in a workshop and brought to the site as a finished panel The latter was a Hellenistic genre which is found in Italy between about 100 BC and 100 AD Most signed mosaics have Greek names suggesting the artists remained mostly Greek though probably often slaves trained up in workshops The late 2nd century BC Nile mosaic of Palestrina is a very large example of the popular genre of Nilotic landscape while the 4th century Gladiator Mosaic in Rome shows several large figures in combat 56 Orpheus mosaics often very large were another favourite subject for villas with several ferocious animals tamed by Orpheus s playing music In the transition to Byzantine art hunting scenes tended to take over large animal scenes Metalwork Edit Metalwork was highly developed and clearly an essential part of the homes of the rich who dined off silver while often drinking from glass and had elaborate cast fittings on their furniture jewellery and small figurines A number of important hoards found in the last 200 years mostly from the more violent edges of the late empire have given us a much clearer idea of Roman silver plate The Mildenhall Treasure and Hoxne Hoard are both from East Anglia in England 57 There are few survivals of upmarket ancient Roman furniture but these show refined and elegant design and execution Coins and medals Edit Hadrian with RESTITVTORI ACHAIAE on the reverse celebrating his spending in Achaia Greece and showing the quality of ordinary bronze coins that were used by the mass population hence the wear on higher areas Few Roman coins reach the artistic peaks of the best Greek coins but they survive in vast numbers and their iconography and inscriptions form a crucial source for the study of Roman history and the development of imperial iconography as well as containing many fine examples of portraiture They penetrated to the rural population of the whole Empire and beyond with barbarians on the fringes of the Empire making their own copies In the Empire medallions in precious metals began to be produced in small editions as imperial gifts which are similar to coins though larger and usually finer in execution Images in coins initially followed Greek styles with gods and symbols but in the death throes of the Republic first Pompey and then Julius Caesar appeared on coins and portraits of the emperor or members of his family became standard on imperial coinage The inscriptions were used for propaganda and in the later Empire the army joined the emperor as the beneficiary Architecture EditMain article Roman architecture Aqueduct of Segovia It was in the area of architecture that Roman art produced its greatest innovations Because the Roman Empire extended over so great of an area and included so many urbanized areas Roman engineers developed methods for citybuilding on a grand scale including the use of concrete Massive buildings like the Pantheon and the Colosseum could never have been constructed with previous materials and methods Though concrete had been invented a thousand years earlier in the Near East the Romans extended its use from fortifications to their most impressive buildings and monuments capitalizing on the material s strength and low cost 58 The concrete core was covered with a plaster brick stone or marble veneer and decorative polychrome and gold gilded sculpture was often added to produce a dazzling effect of power and wealth 58 Because of these methods Roman architecture is legendary for the durability of its construction with many buildings still standing and some still in use mostly buildings converted to churches during the Christian era Many ruins however have been stripped of their marble veneer and are left with their concrete core exposed thus appearing somewhat reduced in size and grandeur from their original appearance such as with the Basilica of Constantine 59 During the Republican era Roman architecture combined Greek and Etruscan elements and produced innovations such as the round temple and the curved arch 60 As Roman power grew in the early empire the first emperors inaugurated wholesale leveling of slums to build grand palaces on the Palatine Hill and nearby areas which required advances in engineering methods and large scale design Roman buildings were then built in the commercial political and social grouping known as a forum that of Julius Caesar being the first and several added later with the Forum Romanum being the most famous The greatest arena in the Roman world the Colosseum was completed around 80 AD at the far end of that forum It held over 50 000 spectators had retractable fabric coverings for shade and could stage massive spectacles including huge gladiatorial contests and mock naval battles This masterpiece of Roman architecture epitomizes Roman engineering efficiency and incorporates all three architectural orders Doric Ionic and Corinthian 61 Less celebrated but just as important if not more so for most Roman citizens was the five story insula or city block the Roman equivalent of an apartment building which housed tens of thousands of Romans 62 Roman theatre in Merida It was during the reign of Trajan 98 117 AD and Hadrian 117 138 AD that the Roman Empire reached its greatest extent and that Rome itself was at the peak of its artistic glory achieved through massive building programs of monuments meeting houses gardens aqueducts baths palaces pavilions sarcophagi and temples 50 The Roman use of the arch the use of concrete building methods the use of the dome all permitted construction of vaulted ceilings and enabled the building of these public spaces and complexes including the palaces public baths and basilicas of the Golden Age of the empire Outstanding examples of dome construction include the Pantheon the Baths of Diocletian and the Baths of Caracalla The Pantheon dedicated to all the planetary gods is the best preserved temple of ancient times with an intact ceiling featuring an open eye in the center The height of the ceiling exactly equals the interior radius of the building creating a hemispherical enclosure 59 These grand buildings later served as inspirational models for architects of the Italian Renaissance such as Brunelleschi By the age of Constantine 306 337 AD the last great building programs in Rome took place including the erection of the Arch of Constantine built near the Colosseum which recycled some stone work from the forum nearby to produce an eclectic mix of styles 13 Roman aqueducts also based on the arch were commonplace in the empire and essential transporters of water to large urban areas Their standing masonry remains are especially impressive such as the Pont du Gard featuring three tiers of arches and the aqueduct of Segovia serving as mute testimony to their quality of their design and construction 61 See also Edit Ancient Rome portalArt collection in ancient Rome Bacchic art Byzantine art Erotic art in Pompeii and Herculaneum Latin literature Music of ancient Rome Neoclassicism Parthian art Pompeian Styles Roman graffitiReferences EditCitations Edit Toynbee J M C 1971 Roman Art The Classical Review 21 3 439 442 doi 10 1017 S0009840X00221331 JSTOR 708631 S2CID 163488573 Sybille Ebert Schifferer Still Life A History Harry N Abrams New York 1998 p 15 ISBN 0 8109 4190 2 Ebert Schifferer p 16 a b Piper p 252 a b c Janson p 158 Piper p 248 253 Piper p 255 a b c d Piper p 253 Piper p 254 a b Piper p 261 Piper p 266 a b c Janson p 190 a b Piper p 260 Janson p 191 according to Ernst Gombrich Plato Critias 107b 108b trans W R M Lamb 1925 at the Perseus Project accessed 27 June 2006 Janson p 192 John Hope Hennessy The Portrait in the Renaissance Bollingen Foundation New York 1966 pp 71 72 Pliny the Elder Natural History XXXV 2 trans H Rackham 1952 Loeb Classical Library Janson p 194 Janson p 195 a b Daniel Thomas Howells 2015 A Catalogue of the Late Antique Gold Glass in the British Museum PDF London the British Museum Arts and Humanities Research Council Accessed 2 October 2016 p 7 Other important contributions to scholarship included the publication of an extensive summary of gold glass scholarship under the entry Fonds de coupes in Fernand Cabrol and Henri Leclercq s comprehensive Dictionnaire d archeologie chretienne et de liturgie in 1923 Leclercq updated Vopel s catalogue recording 512 gold glasses considered to be genuine and developed a typological series consisting of eleven iconographic subjects biblical subjects Christ and the saints various legends inscriptions pagan deities secular subjects male portraits female portraits portraits of couples and families animals and Jewish symbols In a 1926 article devoted to the brushed technique gold glass known as the Brescia medallion Pl 1 Fernand de Mely challenged the deeply ingrained opinion of Garrucci and Vopel that all examples of brushed technique gold glass were in fact forgeries The following year de Mely s hypothesis was supported and further elaborated upon in two articles by different scholars A case for the Brescia medallion s authenticity was argued for not on the basis of its iconographic and orthographic similarity with pieces from Rome a key reason for Garrucci s dismissal but instead for its close similarity to the Fayoum mummy portraits from Egypt Indeed this comparison was given further credence by Walter Crum s assertion that the Greek inscription on the medallion was written in the Alexandrian dialect of Egypt De Mely noted that the medallion and its inscription had been reported as early as 1725 far too early for the idiosyncrasies of Graeco Egyptian word endings to have been understood by forgers Comparing the iconography of the Brescia medallion with other more closely dated objects from Egypt Hayford Peirce then proposed that brushed technique medallions were produced in the early 3rd century whilst de Mely himself advocated a more general 3rd century date With the authenticity of the medallion more firmly established Joseph Breck was prepared to propose a late 3rd to early 4th century date for all of the brushed technique cobalt blue backed portrait medallions some of which also had Greek inscriptions in the Alexandrian dialect Although considered genuine by the majority of scholars by this point the unequivocal authenticity of these glasses was not fully established until 1941 when Gerhart Ladner discovered and published a photograph of one such medallion still in situ where it remains to this day impressed into the plaster sealing in an individual loculus in the Catacomb of Panfilo in Rome Pl 2 Shortly after in 1942 Morey used the phrase brushed technique to categorize this gold glass type the iconography being produced through a series of small incisions undertaken with a gem cutter s precision and lending themselves to a chiaroscuro like effect similar to that of a fine steel engraving simulating brush strokes Beckwith 25 26 Grig throughout Honour and Fleming Pt 2 The Catacombs at illustration 7 7 Weitzmann no 264 entry by J D B see also no 265 Medallion with a Portrait of Gennadios Metropolitan Museum of Art with better image Boardman 338 340 Beckwith 25 Vickers 611 Grig 207 Jas Elsner 2007 The Changing Nature of Roman Art and the Art Historical Problem of Style in Eva R Hoffman ed Late Antique and Medieval Art of the Medieval World 11 18 Oxford Malden amp Carlton Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 2071 5 p 17 Figure 1 3 on p 18 Sines and Sakellarakis 194 195 Grig 207 Lutraan 29 45 goes into considerable detail Natural History Pliny online at the Perseus Project Josephus The Jewish Wars VII 143 152 Ch 6 Para 5 Trans William Whiston Online accessed 27 June 2006 Strong 58 63 Henig 66 69 Henig 24 Henig 66 69 Strong 36 39 48 At the trial of Verres former governor of Sicily Cicero s prosecution details his depredations of art collections at great length Henig 23 24 Henig 66 71 Henig 66 Strong 125 Henig 73 82 Strong 48 52 80 83 108 117 128 132 141 159 177 182 197 211 Henig Chapter 6 Strong 303 315 Henig Chapter 8 Strong 171 176 211 214 Kitzinger 9 both quotes more generally his Ch 1 Strong 250 257 264 266 272 280 Strong 287 291 305 308 315 318 Henig 234 240 D B Saddington 2011 2007 the Evolution of the Roman Imperial Fleets in Paul Erdkamp ed A Companion to the Roman Army 201 217 Malden Oxford Chichester Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 2153 8 Plate 12 2 on p 204 Coarelli Filippo 1987 I Santuari del Lazio in eta repubblicana NIS Rome pp 35 84 Gazda Elaine K 1995 Roman Sculpture and the Ethos of Emulation Reconsidering Repetition Harvard Studies in Classical Philology Department of the Classics Harvard University 97 Greece in Rome Influence Integration Resistance 121 156 doi 10 2307 311303 JSTOR 311303 According to traditional art historical taxonomy Roman sculpture is divided into a number of distinct categories portraiture historical relief funerary reliefs sarcophagi and copies a b Piper p 256 Henig 191 199 Henig 179 187 Henig 200 204 Henig 215 218 Henig 152 158 Henig 116 138 Henig 140 150 jewellery 158 160 a b Janson p 160 a b Janson p 165 Janson p 159 a b Janson p 162 Janson p 167 Sources Edit Beckwith John Early Christian and Byzantine Art Harmondsworth Penguin 1970 Boardman John The Oxford History of Classical Art Oxford Oxford University Press 1993 Grig Lucy Portraits pontiffs and the Christianization of fourth century Rome Papers of the British School at Rome 72 2004 203 379 Roman Art Religion and Society New Studies From the Roman Art Seminar Oxford 2005 Oxford Archaeopress 2006 Janson H W and Anthony F Janson History of Art 6th ed New York Harry N Abrams 2001 Kitzinger Ernst Byzantine Art In the Making Main Lines of Stylistic Development In Mediterranean Art 3rd 7th Century Cambridge Harvard University Press 1995 Henig Martin A Handbook of Roman Art A Comprehensive Survey of All the Arts of the Roman World Ithaca Cornell University Press 1983 Piper David The Illustrated Library of Art Portland House New York 1986 ISBN 0 517 62336 6 Strong Donald Emrys J M C Toynbee and Roger Ling Roman Art 2nd ed Harmondsworth Middlesex Penguin 1988 Further reading EditAndreae Bernard The Art of Rome New York H N Abrams 1977 Beard Mary and John Henderson Classical Art From Greece to Rome Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 Bianchi Bandinelli Ranuccio Rome the Center of Power 500 B C to A D 200 New York G Braziller 1970 Borg Barbara A Companion to Roman Art Chichester West Sussex John Wiley amp Sons 2015 Brilliant Richard Roman Art From the Republic to Constantine Newton Abbot Devon Phaidon Press 1974 D Ambra Eve Art and Identity in the Roman World London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1998 Roman Art Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 Kleiner Fred S A History of Roman Art Belmont CA Thomson Wadsworth 2007 Ramage Nancy H Roman Art Romulus to Constantine 6th ed Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson 2015 Stewart Peter Roman Art Oxford Oxford University Press 2004 Syndicus Eduard Early Christian Art 1st ed New York Hawthorn Books 1962 Tuck Steven L A History of Roman Art Malden Wiley Blackwell 2015 Zanker Paul Roman Art Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ancient Roman art Roman Art World History Encyclopedia Ancient Rome Art History Resources Dissolution and Becoming in Roman Wall Painting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman art amp oldid 1118277493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.