Term
Signs of Hellenization in Pompeii |
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Definition
-pylasters (square engaged columns) -Greek sculptures in homes -dramatic architecture (ex peristyles) -theater -baths (luxurious lifestyle) -mosaics and painted colonnades in homes |
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Term
Characteristics of the 2-century BC forum and town in Pompeii |
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Definition
-portico added to frame the forum - temple later changed to capitoleum - basilica - converted theatre ("odeon") - amphitheatre ("spectacula") |
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Term
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Definition
1- 2nd CBCE and older- Incrustation style 2- 1st CBCE- Architectural 3- ~15-50 CE- Ornate 4- ~50 CE Intricate |
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Term
1st style of wall painting |
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Definition
Incrustation. Wall is painted and molded in stucco to imitate stone blocks. No figural scenes. Example: House of Sallust in Pompeii |
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Term
2nd style of wall-painting |
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Definition
Architectural. The "illusionistic villa". Actual painters employed. Artistic interest in "Dissolving the wall" Example: Bedroom of the villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale. |
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Term
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Definition
Bedroom from the Villa of P. Fannius Synistor from Boscoreale
-2nd style
-trompe l'oeuil elements show virtuosity
- linear perspective
-meant to be explored, has little "hidden areas" |
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Term
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Definition
House of Jason at Pompeii
-shows "bad women"- Medea, Phaedra, and Helen |
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Term
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Definition
Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii
mid 1st CBCE
-may represent Dionysiac cult -figures at the corners continue the scene onto the next wall
-nearly life-size figures engage the viewer |
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Term
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Definition
Garden image from the Villa of Livia (wife of Augustus) at Primaporta
-~20 BCE
-from a "crypto porticus" (underground room)
- 2nd style of painting
- it's not actually possible for everything to bloom at the same time
- Romans saw value in cultivated land |
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Term
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Definition
Black Room from Villa of Boscoreale
-late 1st century BCE
-tall, skinny pylasters
- black walls "celebrate the relative flatness"
-3rd style of painting
- tiny landscape- too small for the viewer to "escape" to it |
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Term
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Definition
Polyphemus and Galatea from the "Mythological Room" of the Imperial Villa at Boscotrecase
-late 1st CBCE
- Polyphemus is pining for Galatea- shows his non-monstruous side, evokes sympathy
-otherwordly landscape provides viewer "travel"
- Galatea is a sea nymph. |
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Term
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Definition
The Laestyrgonians Attack
-mid 1st CBCE
- figures are secondary to landscape
- uses atmospheric perspective- objects further away are out of focus, light and shadow used to foreshorten
-shows Greek identity and knowledge of myth |
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Term
Conventions of Roman Architecture in Early Empire |
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Definition
- use of concrete (no access to marble)
- use of the arch (possible with concrete, much harder to do with stone)
- marriage of the trabeated style with the arcuated style
- use of Greek architectural orders |
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Term
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Definition
Sanctuary of Jupiter at Terracina
2nd CBCE
-temple doesn't survive, only platform
- shows spectacular nature of Roman art- overlooks ocean, would have been visible from town below
- concrete barrel vaults
- uses "opus incertum"- rocks form foundation and are covered with concrete
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Term
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Definition
Sanctuary of Fortuna
2nd or 1st CBCE
-uses both trabeated and curved architecture
- copies Hellenistic architecture
- symmetry provides a "desirable view"
- movement from darkened hallways to bright light |
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Term
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Definition
Temple of Portunus (God of Harbors)
Late 2nd CBCE
-Greek in that it has ionic columns, pseudo-peripteral colonnade (some parts of perstyle are engaged columns), used tufa as a building model
-Roman in that it has porch (but it's concrete-covered)- it's almost like a mini Capitoline temple |
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Term
First Triumvirate of Roman Emperors |
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Definition
Julius Caesar, Pompey, and Crassius. Crassius dies in 53 BC, Julius Caesar crosses the Rubicon to march on Pompey |
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Term
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Definition
Theatre of Pompey
Rome, 55 BCE
-first permanent (non-wooden) theatre in Rome
- built with Pompey's personal wealth from spoils of war
- built on flat ground (not on a hillside, like an amphitheater would require)
- barrel vaults, concrete allow structure
- criticized at the time for showing such massive hubris
- had a portico-enclosed square adjacent that showed war artifacts and Pompey's family history |
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Term
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Definition
Forum of Julius Caesar
46 BC
-contains temple of Venus Genetrix (purported ancestor of Caesar)
- portico had some statues in it, but it really just existed to frame forum
- not completed in Caesar's lifetime- he died in 44 BC
- Augustus completes the monument later |
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Term
Roman Senatorial Portraits |
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Definition
veristic- interest in showing not only the real flaws of people, but exaggerrated versions of those flaws
- deep wrinkles and sagging skin showed age (and therefore wisdom) and commitment to serving the Republican
-reaction to Augustan, "everyone-looks-17" art
- shows gravitas and pietas |
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Term
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Definition
Portrait of Julius Caesar in Green Basanite
end of 1st CBCE
- made of green basanite
-rumored to be commissioned by Cleopatra
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Term
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Definition
Statue of Augustus as general from Primaporta, copy of bronze original
ca. 20 BCE
- accompanied by Cupid (Augustus "descended from" Venus)
- right after his victory over Antony. Positive image combats the horror of civil war
- always represented himself as youthful
- modeled after the Doryphorous
- Military dress + bare feet = combination of Greek and Roman identities |
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Term
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Definition
Mausoleum of Augustus
25 BCE
- made of tufa, concrete, and travertine
- was in Rome, but mimics Etruscan temples
- roofed on each level, with trees planted in those roofs (domination of landscape?) |
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Term
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Definition
Pyramid of Gaius Cestius
sometime before 12 BCE
- along road outside of Rome
- pyramidine form product of the "Egyptomania" in Rome after the Battle of Actium
- concrete with marble revetment
-later incorporated into Aurelian walls |
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Term
The Julio-Claudian Emperors |
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Definition
Tiberius (14-37 CE)- Augustus's nephew
Gaius (Caligula) 37-41
Claudius 41-54
Nero 54-68
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Term
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Definition
A Roman military camp after which several provincial cities were modeled. Had a central area (forum) that was cut by two major streets- the cardo (North-South) and the decumanus (West-East) |
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Term
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Definition
Aqueduct at Nimes, France (Pont-du-Gard)
-shows Roman domination of the landscape, spectacle
- ~30 miles long. Brings water to the town using mostly gravity
- nature reorganized for the good of the empire
- not designed to be purely functional- also shows interest in beauty
- shows the people of the provinces the power of the arch (and of Roman concrete) |
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Term
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Definition
Maison Carree late 1st CBCE
- Corinthian columns, clear front
- on a high podium, has a pseudo-peripteral colonnade (some columns are engaged)
-possibly made while Augustus was still alive |
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Term
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Definition
The Augustan arch at Rimini
27 BCE
-brick-faced with travertine
- a triumphal arch petrifies the moment of a general's victory. This one celebrates the completion of Via Flaminia (a road to Rome)
- medieval addition made later |
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Term
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Definition
Portrait of Tiberius
- 14-37 CE
- adopted son of Augustus (his nephew)
- interest in looking like Augustan portraits- youthful face, cap-like hair, dome-shaped head
- built himself a "pleasure palace" (Villa Jovis) on Capri
-retreated physically from Rome, psychologically from the public life |
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Term
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Definition
Gemma Augustea
~25 CE
- a cameo (relief on a gem or glass that uses multiple layers of color to contrast the background with the foreground)
- public symbolism on a private artifact
- Upper Section: shows Augustus as Jupiter (has staff, eagle) with goddess Roma. Possibly the representation of Augustus after death.
- Being crown by Oikoumene, the goddess of the civilized world. Her crown is city walls with a veil.
- Earth & sea deities next to throne
- on left, Tiberius stepping out of chariot -> succession
- other guy is probably Germanicus, who was supposed to succeed Tiberius, but died
Lower Section-
- barbarians. They have wild hair.
- one figures has a torque, which the Celts wore
- Roman soldiers erected a trophy- some kind of impromptu monument with the insignia of the conquered
- Who was this made for? It was made in onyx, surely expensive. Perhaps to be shown to private royal circles, not to a mass audience |
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Term
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Definition
The Octagonal Rome from the Domus Aurea
64 CE
-part of Nero's pleasure palace in Rome.
- concrete being used to its fullest potential in a domestic setting- not just for foundation, but for entire room
- marble floors, marble used on upper story for what seems like the first time
- built by Severus and Ceter
- two of the connecting rooms use groin vaults- first time in a domestic setting.
- decorated with spindly lines, small figures to emphasize flatness of the wall |
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Term
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Definition
Vespasian (69-79)
Titus (79-81)
Domition (81-96)
Nerva (96-98)
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Trajan (98-117)
Hadrian (117-138) |
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Term
Conventions of Nero portraiture |
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Definition
"fleshy", pudgy face, youthful
dome-like head
sort of absurdly neat carved curls, maybe to express personal virility |
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Term
Conventions of Vespasian portraiture |
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Definition
- a return to the veristic style to distance Vespasian from Nero (who favored youthful portraits, after Augustus) |
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Term
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Definition
The Colesseum (Flavian ampitheater)
72-80 CE
-Vespasian drains the lake from Nero's Domus Aurelia to use its foundation to make the colesseum -> correcting Nero's mistake by appropriating his palace for the public good
- finished by Vespasian's son Titus
- a "double theater" of gladiatorial combat and animal combat
-seats 50,000
- revetted with travertine (removed during Middle Ages)
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Term
Column types on the Colesseum, from the ground up |
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Definition
ground level = doric
2nd floor = ionic
third floor = engaged corinthian columns
4th floor = engaged corinthian pylasters
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Term
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Definition
Arch of Titus
CE 81
-marble and travertine
- celebrates victory in the Judean wars
- Titus died, arch finished by his brother Domitian
- 110 water fountains
-Victory placing a crown on Titus's head
- relief sculpture of Titus being transported on a chariot |
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Term
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Definition
Forum of Trajan
sometime between 98 and 117 CE
- built by Apollodorus of Damascus, master builder
- made with funding from the spoils of Dacian wars
- much larger than the fora of Caesar, Augustus, or Nerva
- Trajan had 1000 ft of an adjacent hill flattened to make room for his forum (domination of landscape hoooo)
- markets of Trajan built up the side of the same hill
-used white marble |
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Term
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Definition
Basilica Ulpia
- Ulpia is the family name of Trajan
- contained Greek and Roman libraries
- rounded apses are called "hemicycles"
- had a column with an equestrian statue of Trajan
-used white and colored marble
- attic level of porticoes has statues of captured Dacians. trousers show that Dacians are barbaric
-basilica has coffered ceiling
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Term
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Definition
Column of Trajan
-first time we see a Roman column with a narrative on its outside.
-Trajan's ashes on inside it. also a staircase
- In antiquity there may have been balconies nearby so people could see the upper levels of the narrative
- relief relates Trajan to the Greek emperors |
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Term
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Definition
The Baths of Trajan
-place to socialize, do business, exercise
- baths = assertion of Roman identity
- built over part of the Domus Aurelia
- astonishing lavishness, but it's ok because it was for the public
- library contained within. shows desire to exercise body as well as mind |
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Term
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Definition
Pantheon (Rome)
- Roman characteristics: use of concrete, use of the arch, marriage of trabeated style and arcuated style, use of Greek column orders
- 2 pantheons preceded it
- Hadrian recreating history (inscription refers to Augustus's building guy), relating himself to Greek emperors
- porch is the same as the Capitoline temple
- used to have a portico yard and a triumphal arch (creates a vista)
- coffers on dome support it
-use of stone from the provinces shows the wide reach of the empire
- marble revettment and decorative columns hide concrete ("a Roman building wearing Greek clothes")
- light from oculus is centered on the summer solstice
- drain in the middle of the floor removes rain water
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Term
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Definition
Hadrian's villa at Tivoli (125 CE)
- shows Hadrian's interest in the art of imperial villa
-decorated with art from the provinces, to show reach of empire and dominance
- uses multiple Greek architectural orders
- man-made canal- probably a representation of the Nile
- Apollodorus of Damascus insulted Hadrian's architecture ("go play with your pumpkins"), so Hadrian had him killed
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Term
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Definition
The City of Timgad (Africa)
-City built by Hadrian for retired soldiers.
- square "castrum" plan (like a Roman military camp)
- intersecting cardo and decumanus with forum at the intersection
- theatre
- arch at the city entrance, colonnaded street (creates a vista, draws the eye down the street to the arch |
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Term
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Definition
Severan Basilica of Leptis Magna (Syria)
- Emperor Severus reigned (193-211) born in Leptis Magna, spent a lot of money on the city
- an ancient city Romanized: had triumphal arch, basilica, Severan forum, cardo and decumanus
- carved pylasters frame apses
-columns covered with pink stone from Egypt- sign of how much money was spent on city
- cardo and decumanus do not run perfectly north-south, but were paved in such a way as to preserve the vista of the basilica from the street
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Term
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Definition
Portraits of the 4 Tetrarchs from Constantinople, ~305
-little (4'3") men without musculature, perfectly pleated skirts -> representational, not mimetic
- made of Poryphory (rare stone)
- shows 2 Augusti (high emperors) and 2 Caesars (low emperors) embracing, supporting each other
- eyes like the art of Palmyra
- more interested in showing the idea of a tetrarchy than 4 individual portraits |
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Term
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Definition
Arch of Constantine (312-315 CE)
-commemorates victory against Maxentius. C and M were part of the 2nd tetrarchy, Constantine messed it up
- bound Dacians from the forum of Trajan are reused. Constantine took statues from multiple Roman monuments (to associate himself with past emperors?)
- Constantinian frieze- Ad locutio (address to the people)- can see typical 4th-century interest in pattern by looking at the heads of the crowd
-incised drapery
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Term
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Definition
The Basilica Nova (aka Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine) Rome, 306-313 CE
-begun by Maxentius, finished by Constantine - use of barrel vaults- previously not seen in basilicas - statue of Constantine from inside- head alone is 8 feet tall - Constantine's power was in the provinces- building this basilica asserts his authority in Rome - used to have marble revettments - utilitarian architecture (looks more like a bath house than a basilica) used for a major civic space |
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Term
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Definition
The Basilica at Trier (Aula Palatina), Trier, Germany
early 4th CE
-audience hall from the palace of Constantine
- made in brick. Would have been stucco'd in antiquity
- square engaged columns are a product of the material shape
- looks much more provincial than Roman. No marble or concrete
- the windows in the apse are slightly shorter than the windows in the nave, which makes them look farther away -> nave seems longer
- squared-off arch at the apse is like a triumphal arch
- wooden roof |
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