Slide concept by Anthony DAscoli FOR EDUCA.docxjennifer822
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Slide concept by Anthony D'Ascoli
FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY
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Roman Empire at Greatest Extent
The Roman EraApril 21, 753 BCE – the legendary founding of Rome by Romulus & Remus753- 509 BCE – Roman monarchy 509 – 27 BCE – Roman Republican Period264 – 241 BCE First Punic War – Rome vs Carthage – Rome gains Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica218 – 201 BCE – Second Punic War – Hannibal invades Italy with elephants traveling through the Alps – Rome vs Carthage – Rome wins – gains southern Spain, coastal France and part of North Africa149 -146 BCE – Third Punic War – Rome vs Carthage – Rome wins – gains modern day Tunisia and names it Africa as Roman province- Carthage is destroyed
The Roman Era
88 – 79 BCE – First Roman Civil War – Marius vs Sulla – Sulla wins – implements first dictatorship without time limit73-71 BCE – Spartacus leads slave revolt – eventually crushed by Crassus60 BCE – formation of the First Triumvirate – Julius Caesar, Pompey & Crassus rule Rome illegally58 – 50 BCE – Gaul conquered by G. Julius Caesar49-46 BCE Second Roman Civil War – Caesar vs Pompey – Caesar wins – becomes dictator for life – beginning of end for Rome as a RepublicMarch 15, 44 BCE – Julius Caesar is assassinated by Senators led by Brutus and Cassius
The Roman Era43 BCE – Second Triumvirate formed by Octavian Caesar, Mark Antony and Lepidus in order to catch Caesar’s murderers31 BCE – Third Roman Civil War – Octavian vs Mark Antony & Cleopatra – Octavian wins becomes sole ruler of Roman world – Egypt becomes Roman province27 BCE – Octavian changes his name to Augustus (revered one) – Official End of Roman Republic: Rome becomes an Empire – Augustus its first Emperor27 BCE – 476 CE – Roman Imperial Period (Roman Empire)27 BCE – 68 CE – Julio-Claudian Dynasty rules in Rome (Augustus, Tiberias, Caligula, Claudius & Nero)64 CE – Great Fire in Rome – Nero blames and then persecutes Christians – Saints Peter and Paul are martyred69 – 96 CE – Flavian Dynasty rules Rome (Vespasian, Titus and Domitian)
The Roman Era
August 24, 79 CE – Mount Vesuvius erupts destroying Pompeii, Stabiae and Herculaneum96 – 180 CE – Reign of the 5 Good Emperors (Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pius & Marcus Aurelius)98 – 117 – Reign of Trajan – Roman Empire reaches its largest extent180 CE – reign of Commodus ends the Pax Romana (200 years of peace in Rome)192 – 395 Late Imperial Period – decay in art and leadership with few exceptions193 – 235 – Severan Dynasty rules Rome (Septimus Severus, Caracalla, Macrinus, Elagabalus and Alexander Severus)235-284 – Rule of the Barracks Emperors (Emperors came from army) – chaotic period of rulers284 – 305 – Reign of Diocletian – forms tetrarchy (rule of 4) to stop chaos of succession- starts Great Persecution of Christians – destroys churches and kills many people
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Evolution and Development of Arts & Architecture (as one of the intrinsic parts of Civilization)in Europe mainly in Greece and Rome occupy a significant position in the history of Human Civilization.
The culture of Art & Architecture was started in Greece in 450 B.C. In case of Romanian Arts and Architecture it was around 1st century BC the same was got developed and mostly inspired by Greek civilization.
The Art & Architecture in ancient Greece all shared the same general form: Rows of columns supporting a horizontal entablature ( a kind of decorative molding) and a triangular roof. At each end of the roof, the above entablature, was a triangle space known as the pediment, into which sculptors squeezed elaborate scenes. In case of Rome, the Art & Architecture includes painting, sculptures, mosaic works etc. Sculpture was perhaps considered as the highest form of art in Rome.
4. GREEK ROMAN
Preferred Structure: Temples to Glorify Gods Civic Buildings to honor
Empire
Walls: Made of cut stone blocks Concrete with Ornamental
facing
Trademark Forms: Rectangles, Straight Lines Circles, Curved Lines
Support System: Post and Lintel Rounded Arch
Column Style: Doric & Ionic Corinthian
Sculpture: Idealized Gods & Realistic (Verism) humans,
Goddesses idealized officials
Painting: Stylized figures floating in Realistic images with
Space perspective
Subject of Art: Mythology Civic Leaders, military
triumphs
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5. Temple of Athena Nike Temple of Portunus
Classical Greek Rome, Italy - ca. 75 BC
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8. Athena and Alcyoneus
frieze from the Altar of
Zeus at Pergamon, c.180
BCE.
HELLENISTIC GREEK
Spoils from the Temple of
Solomon, Jerusalem.
Relief on the Arch of Titus
EARLY EMPIRE ROME
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9. Etruscan Supremacy: 700-509 BCE
Provided link between Greek and Roman Art
KEYWORDS: TERRA-COTTA, COMPOSITE ORDER
Roman Republican Period: 509-27 BCE
Begins with overthrowing last Etruscan King and ends with Julius
Caesar… Major buildings built more for POLITCAL use than for
WORSHIP
KEYWORDS: TEMPLES, ARA PACIS, HOMAGE TO RULERS
Early Empire Period: 27 BCE-180 CE
KEYWORDS: WALL PAINTINGS, CONCRETE, ARCH, COLOSSEUM
The High Empire: 180-195 CE
Five Good Emperors (Trajan, Hadrian, etc.) kept things prosperous
and peaceful.
KEYWORDS: COLUMN OF TRAJAN, HADRIAN’S WALL, PANTHEON
The Late Empire: 195-400 CE
Diocletian had Empire divided into four parts.
KEYWORDS: TETRARCHY, ARCH OF CONSTANTINE
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11. Temple of Portunus
Republic Rome Rome, Italy - ca. 75 BC EARLY REPUBLIC ROMAN
A superb example of Roman eclecticism
is the Temple of Portunus, the Roman
god of harbors.
Follows the Etruscan pattern:
•High podium is accessible only at the
front, with its wide flight of steps.
•Freestanding columns are confined to
the deep porch.
•The structure is built of stone overlaid
originally with stucco in imitation of the
white marble temples of the Greeks.
•The columns are Ionic, complete with
flutes and bases.
•In an effort to approximate a peripteral
Greek temple - while maintaining the
Etruscan plan - the architect added a
series of engaged Ionic half-columns
around the cella’s sides and back.
Model of a typical Etruscan Temple
•The result was a pseudoperipteral 6th Century BC
temple.
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12. Republic Rome Temple of “the Sibyl” or of “Vesta”
Tivoli, Italy - early first century BC
The Romans’ admiration for the
Greek temples they encountered in
their conquests also led to the
importation of the round, or tholos,
temple type.
The travertine columns are Corinthian
In contrast with Greek practice, the
cell wall was constructed not of
masonry blocks but of a new
invention: concrete.
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13. Aulus Metellus
Republic Rome Late 2nd - early 1st century BC
Artists of the Republican Period sought to
create very realistic images of their rulers.
Dressed in the traditional draped toga,
Aulus Metellus poses with authority and
persuasiveness.
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14. Republic Rome Funerary Relief with Portraits of the Gessii
Rome (?), Italy - ca. 30 BC
The surviving sculptural portraits of prominent Roman Republican figures are uniformly literal
reproductions of individual faces. Although their style derives to some degree from Hellenistic
and Etruscan portraits, Republican portraits are one way the patrician class celebrated its
elevated status. Slaves and former slaves could not possess such portraits, because, under
Roman law, they were not people but property. Yet when freed slaves died, they often ordered
portraits for their tombs - in a style that contrasts sharply with that favored by freeborn patricians.
This image depicts former slaves who have gained their freedom and right to have their portraits
created.
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15. Republic Rome
Head of a Roman patrician, from Otricoli,
Italy, ca 75-50 B.C.
Republican patrician portraits :
Mostly men of advanced age (generally these
elders held the power in the state)
One of the most striking of these so-called veristic
(superrealistic) portraits is of an unidentified
patrician.
We are able to see this man’s personality: serious,
experienced, determined- virtues that were admired
during the Republic.
Kresilas, Pericles
Classical Greece
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16. Imperial Rome
Octavian Caesar (the great-nephew
and adopted ‘son’ of Julius Caesar)
became the first Roman Emperor in
44BC. By 27 BC, the Senate
conferred him the title ‘Augustus’
(meaning ‘exalted’ or ‘sacred’).
For the next 41 years, Augustus
Caesar led the empire thru a period of
peace and prosperity known as the
Pax Romana, or Roman Peace.
The inclusion of Venus’ son, Cupid, is
a reminder of Augustus’ divine descent
(related to Goddess Venus).
Furthermore, this depicts the return of
Roman military standards by the
Parthians. The marble statue was
originally painted. Augustus of Primaporta,
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Early 1st Century BCE EARLY EMPIRE ROMAN
17. Imperial Rome
The Ara Pacis (or ‘Altar of Augustan
Peace’) was a monument dedicated in
9 BC to commemorate Augustus;
return to Rome after establishing
Roman rule in Gaul.
Included on this monument was the
Imperial Procession – a relief showing
the family members and other who
attended the dedication. (This is much
different than the ‘Procession of the
Gods’ frieze located on the Parthenon
in Athens.)
Ara Pacis, 13-9 BCE.
EARLY EMPIRE ROMAN. 17
18. Imperial Rome
Augustus Caesar was elevated to
Divine Status after his death (as
memorialized with the Ara Pacis)…
Here is an onyx cameo of the ‘crowning’
of Augustus as Jupiter – King of the
Gods. His adopted son, Tiberius, holds
a lance and steps out of the chariot on
the left, ready to be the next Emperor.
This piece combines:
• The idealized heroicism of
Classical Greek Art
• The dramatic action of Hellenistic
Art
• The Roman realism and
depiction of historical events Gemma Augustea, Onyx
ca 1 Century AD, EARLY EMPIRE ROMAN
st
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19. Pompeii & the Aerial view of the amphitheater, Pompeii,
Cities of Vesuvius Italy, ca 80 B.C.
The forum was an oasis in the heart of
Pompeii - an open, airy plaza.
Throughout the rest of the city, every
square foot of land was developed. At the
southern end of the town, immediately
after the Roman colony was founded in
80 B.C., Pompeii’s new citizens erected a
large amphitheater. It is the earliest such
structure known and could seat some
twenty thousand spectators. The word-
amphitheater means “double theater”,
and the Roman structures closely
resemble two Greek theaters put
together, although the Greeks never built
amphitheaters. Greek theaters were
placed on natural hillsides, but supporting
an amphitheater’s continuous elliptical Arena is Latin for “sand”, which soaked up the
cavea required building an artificial contestants’ blood. Instead of refined
mountain- and only concrete, unknown to performances, the Amphitheater held mostly bloody
the Greeks, was capable of such a job. gladiator combats.
Barrel vaults also form the tunnels
leading to the stone seats of the arena.
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20. Pompeii & the
Cities of Vesuvius Brawl in the Pompeii amphitheater
Pompeii, Italy, ca. A.D. 60-79
This painting that is found on the wall of
a Pompeian house depicts an incident
that occurred in the amphitheater in A.D.
59. A brawl broke out between the
Pompeians and their neighbors, the
Nucerians, during a contest between the
two towns.
The fight left many wounded and led to a
10 year prohibition against such events.
The painting shows the cloth awning
(velarium) that could be rolled down from
the top of the cavea to shield spectators
from either sun or rain. It also has the
distinctive external double staircases
that enabled large numbers of people to
enter and exit the cavea in an orderly
fashion.
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23. Atrium of the House of the Vettii
Pompeii & the Pompeii, Italy, second century B.C., rebuilt A.D. 62-79
Cities of Vesuvius
One of the best preserved houses at
Pompeii, partially rebuilt and an
obligatory stop on every tourist’s
itinerary today, is the House of the
Vettii, an old Pompeian house
remodeled and repainted after the
earthquake of A.D. 62
The photograph was taken in the
fauces. It shows the impluvium in the
center of the atrium, the opening in the
roof above, and in the background, the
peristyle garden with its marble tables
and mural paintings.
The house was owned by two
brothers, Aulus Vettius Restitutus and
Aulus Vettius Conviva, probably
freedmen who had made their fortune
as merchants. Their wealth enabled
them to purchase and furnished
houses that would have been owned
only by patricians.
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24. Pompeii & the
Dionysiac mystery frieze
Cities of Vesuvius Pompeii, Italy, ca. 60-50 B.C.
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25. Pompeii & the Dionysiac mystery frieze
Cities of Vesuvius Pompeii, Italy, ca. 60-50 B.C.
Especially striking is how some of the figures interact across the corners of the room. Nothing
comparable to this existed in Hellenistic Greece. Despite the presence of Dionysos, satyrs, and other
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figures from Greek mythology, this is a Roman design.
26. General view of wall paintings from Cubiculum M of the
Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor
Early Empire Boscoreale, Italy, decorated ca. 50-40 B.C.
In the early Second Style Dionysiac mystery
frieze, the spatial illusionism is confined to the
painted platform that projects into the room.
This cubiculum is a prime example of mature
Second Style designs in which painters
created a 3-D setting that also extends
beyond the wall.
All around the room the painter opened up
the walls with vistas of Italian towns and
sacred sanctuaries. Painted doors and gates
invite the viewer to walk through the wall into
the created world. Their attempt at
perspective was intuitive and it not conform to
the “rules” of linear perspective that would
later be discovered by the Renaissance
masters.
Although this painter was inconsistent in
applying it, he demonstrated a interest in, but Intuitive perspective was a favored tool of Second Style
lacking knowledge of linear [single painters seeking to transform the usually windowless
walls of Roman houses into “picture-window” vistas that
vanishing-point] perspective. It was most
expanded the apparent space of the rooms.
successfully employed in the far corners,
where a low gate leads to a peristyle framing
a tholos temple [see detail on next slide]. 26
27. Detail of tholos from Cubiculum M of the Villa of Publius
Fannius Synistor
Early Empire Boscoreale, Italy, ca. 50-40 B.C.
Illusionism:
The Second Style is, in most respects, the antithesis of the
First Style. Some scholars have argued that the Second Style
also has precedents in Greece, but most believe it is a Roman
invention.
The Second Style evolved in Italy around 80 B.C. and was
popular until around 15 B.C., when the Third Style was
introduced.
Second Style painters aimed not to create the illusion of an
elegant marble wall, as First Style painters sought to do.
Rather, they wanted to dissolve a room’s confining walls and
replace them with the illusion of an imaginary three-
dimensional world, which they did only pictorially.
The First Style’s modeled stucco panels gave way to the
Second Style’s flat wall surfaces.
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28. Gardenscape - Villa of Livia
Primaporta, Italy
Republican Era /Early Empire ca. 30-20 B.C.
Second Style picture-window wall
Second Style painters favored
linear perspective seeking to
transform usually windowless walls
of Roman houses into “picture-
windows” vistas that expanded the
apparent space of the rooms.
Recession is suggested by
atmospheric perspective, which
creates the illusion of distance by
the greater reduction of color
intensity, the shift of color toward
an almost neutral blue, and the
blurring of contours as the intended - The flimsy fence is the only architectural element
distance between eye and object - The wall seems to frame the landscape
increases. - The fence, trees, and birds in the foreground are precisely
painted, while the details of the dense foliage in the background
are indistinct.
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29. 4th style wall painting in room 78 of the
Domus Aurea (“golden house”) of Nero
4th style, Rome, Italy 64-48 A.D.
In the Fourth Style the obsession with illusions
returned once again.
This style became popular around the time of
the Pompein earthquake
In the Golden House of Nero, where this
mural is located, all the walls are a creamy
white with landscapes and other motifs
painted directly on the white walls.
The paintings that are on the walls are
“irrational fantasies” They depict fragments of
buildings, columns supporting half pediments,
double story columns supporting nothing at
all.
Architecture became just another motif in the
artist’s design.
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30. Neptune and Amphitrite wall mosaic
Herculanium, Italy 62-79 A.D.
The house of Neptune and Amphitrite takes its
name from this mosaic. Shown here are
Neptune, sea god, and his wife Amphitrite set
into an elaborate niche.
They preside over the running water of the
fountain in the courtyard in front of them.
Mosaics were usually confined to floors in the
ancient world. In the Roman times, however,
mosaics were used to decorate walls and even
ceilings. This foreshadowed the extensive use
of mosics in the Middle Ages.
The subject chosen for Roman mosaics were
diverse although mythological themes were
immensily popular.
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31. Portrait of a husband and wife;
Pompeii and the Cities of Vesuvius Pompeii,Italy AD 70-79
Originally formed part of a Fourth Style wall
of an exedra, recessed area on the opening
of the atrium of a Pompeian house.
Standard attributes of Roman marriage
portraits are displayed here with the man
holding a scroll and the woman holding a
stylus and a wax writing tablet. These
portraits suggested high education even if it
wasn’t true of the subjects.
The heads are individualized to the subject’s
features, not simply standard types.
This is the equivalent of modern wedding
photographs.
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32. Still life with peaches, detail from a wall
Pompeii and the Cities of Vesuvius painting; Heraculaneum, Italy; AD 62-79
Roman painters’ interest in the likeness of
individual people was matched by their concern
for recording the appearance of everyday
objects.
This still life demonstrates that Roman painters
sought to create illusionistic effects while
depicting small objects. Here they used light
and shade with attention to shadows and
highlights.
The illusion created here is the furthest advance
by ancient painters in representational
technique. It appears that this artist understood
that the look of things is a function of light. Also,
the goal was to paint light as one would strive to
paint the touchable object that reflects and
absorbs it. This illusion of light marks the furthest
advance by ancient painters in
representational technique; it would not be
seen again until the Dutch in the 1700’s.
Still Life, Dutch
ca. 1700
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33. Augustus Rome's first emperor. He also added many territories to the empire.
Claudius He conquered Britain.
He was insane. He murdered his mother and his wife and threw
Nero
thousands of Christians to the lions.
Before he was emperor he destroyed the great Jewish temple of Solomon
Titus
in Jerusalem.
He was a great conqueror. Under his rule the empire reached its greatest
Trajan
extent.
He built 'Hadrian's Wall' in the north of Britain to shield the province from
Hadrian
the northern barbarians.
Diocletian He split the empire into two pieces - a western and an eastern empire.
He was the first Christian emperor. He united the empire again chose his
Constantine
capital to be the small town Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople.
He was the last emperor of Rome, nicknamed Augustulus which means
Romulus Augustus
'little Augustus'.
He was the last 'great' emperor. He conquered many territories, created
Justinian
the 'Justinian Code' and built the fantastic church Santa Sophia.
The last emperor of Constantinople. He died defending his great city
Constantine XI
against the Turks.
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