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Portrait Bust of Vespasian
c. 69-79 CE (when he ruled)
Roman
Imperial Period
Marble
--Julio-Claudian = generally refers to the first 5 emperors of Ancient Rome: Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero
--Brings veristic ("true to life") style back to Rome
--Called the "Savior of Rome" |
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Colosseum (Flavian Ampitheater)
72-80 CE
Roman, Imperial Period
Concrete faced with travertine (beige-colored Roman marble)
Roman Forum, Rome; Commissioned by Vespasian
--Location is key! In Forum because it is the civic/religious center of the city; begun by Caesar and upheld by Augustus
--Location = previously a lake made by Nero after the fires of Rome; VESPASIAN drains lake and builds PUBLIC SPORTING ARENA
--Free to all Roman citizens
--Roman interpretation of Greek theater (basically stuck two together to form arena)
--Columns compared to Parthenon; Colosseum's columns are just for decoration with no fluting while the Parthenon would topple without them
--Could fit 50,000 and evacuate in 10 minutes |
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--Sport
--Romans have 3 values: win by any means, death before dishonor, and self-sacrifice
--Those values are embodied in the games
--NAUMACHIA = mock naval battles
--Amazing because Colosseum could be flooded and drained in less than a day
--Battles are usually reenactments; shows importance Romans place on their history |
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--Colosseum is built next Colossus of Nero to remind everyone who entered what Nero did and how much better off they were under Vespasian
--Juxtaposition of two monuments shown on COIN OF ANTONIUS GORDIANUS III PIUS (238-244 CE) |
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--Retractable roof; could provide shade-- |
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Arches & Columns of Colosseum |
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--Arches = distinctly Roman feature
--No fluting on columns unless referencing the Greeks
--Columns have kind of Hierarchical Scale as you move up the structure (Doric --> Corinthian) |
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--1/2 a column embedded into wall-- |
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--Engaged column with square shaft and Corinthian capitol
--THIS IS KNOWN AS THE TUSCAN ORDER |
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Arch of Titus
81 CE
Roman, Imperial Period
Pentelic and Cararra Marble (Imperial Marble) over Concrete
Forum, Rome. Commissioned by Domition (sone of Vespasian, brother of Titus)
--Titus sent troops to Pompeii and Herculaneum to set up shelters after Mt. Vesuvius erupted
--Arch = TRIUMPHAL ARCH = marks a great Roman victory; granted by senate (even though commissioned by Domitian); also a monument to commemorate the TRIUMPHAL PROCESSION
--Top (ATTIC) is Carrara, bottom = Greek marble (signifies Rome is stronger/better, but recognizes their Greek predecessors)
--SPQR = initials of Republic; shows Domition's "humility" in honoring his brother |
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Triumph of Titus
70 CE
Victory over Judea
--Nike (goddess of victory) crowns Titus w/ laurel wreath
--Riding in QUADRIGA (4-horse chariot of the emperor) led by personification of Roma
--Everyone on same level (ISOCEPHALIC) except for emperor; designates his importance
--ATMOSPHERIC PERSPECTIVE = as you get farther away the relief fades creating illusion of depth
--FASCES = spear-looking things; series of reeds bound together w/ axe tied to it; shows strength in numbers; CENTRAL ICONOGRAPHY FOR REPUBLIC |
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Spoils of Jerusalem
81 CE
Roman, Imperial Period
Marble
From Arch of Titus, opposite of Triumph of Titus
--Shows 7-branch Menorah; specific to Temple of Jerusalem
--Shows Triumphal Procession passing under arch
--Images walk with you, making victories eternal; every time someone passes under, history repeats itself |
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Apotheosis of Titus
81 CE
Roman, Imperial Period
Marble
From Arch of Titus, up in coffers, at APEX of arch
--APOTHEOSIS = deification of Titus
--Riding on wings of Jupiter to Heaven
--Makes monument both political and religious |
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Pantheon
125-128 CE
Roman, Imperial Period
Commissioned by Emperor Hadrian (dedicated to Marcus Agrippa, the first to build a temple on the Campus Martius)
Brick and concrete
--Pantheon = temple where ALL GODS, not just Roman
--Located on Campus Martius, "Field of Mars"
--Campus Martius = where soldiers live and train
--Empire was so expansive that soldiers had many different gods, so the Pantheon gave them a place to worship and honor their respective deities
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--Facade - columns = monolithic of Egyptian Granite (35 Ft)
--Smooth column with Corinthian capitol
--There is no evidence of any lost or broken columns; impressive because they were all transported whole, not in pieces like the Parthenon
--Further demonstration of power and wealth of Ancient Rome |
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--Would be in front of Pantheon
--Transitional element between secular and religious/spiritual world
--Helps buffer sound |
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--Arch in 360 degrees (uniquely Roman)
--Dome in Pantheon demonstrates universality of Roman Empire; "umbrella"
--Dome of Heaven = notion of representation of divine
--Pantheon = largest concrete dome in the world after 2,000 years |
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--Pattern radiating from single point-- |
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--Hole in center of dome (where keystone would be in an arch)-- |
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