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Roman Painting

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Roman Painting Comparative Civilizations 12 K.J. Benoy Roman Painting Relationship to Mosaics Similar techniques marked mosaic work and painting in the Roman period. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Roman Painting


1
Roman Painting
  • Comparative Civilizations 12
  • K.J. Benoy

2
Roman Painting Relationship to Mosaics
  • Similar techniques marked mosaic work and
    painting in the Roman period.

3
Roman Painting Relationship to Mosaics
  • Though the Romans did not develop the ability to
    display three dimensions on two dimensional
    surfaces to the same level of competence as
    Renaissance artists, they came close.
  • Only the mathematical precision was lacking.

4
Roman Painting Fresco Technique
  • Much Roman painting decorated walls.
  • The technique used was true Fresco.
  • This involved applying lime over a layer of
    plaster, mixed with sand over an upper layer of
    mixed marble and alabaster dust.
  • True fresco involves applying paint to wet
    plaster.
  • The painter must estimate the amount of plaster
    to be applied in a day.
  • Unpainted plaster must be chipped away as it is
    of no use.

5
Roman Painting Paint.
  • The most frequently employed pigments were earth
    tones.
  • Less commonly used was cinnabar, which is the
    brilliant red found at the Villa of the Mysteries
    at Pompeii.

6
Roman Painting Fresco Techniques
  • The problem for the painter is that the colour
    applied may not be the colour that results.
  • Cinnabar occasionally turned black with time. It
    is also a very expensive paint.
  • Applied white always turned black.
  • Gold leaf is occasionally used.

7
Roman Painting - Pompeii
  • Much of our knowledge of Roman domestic painting
    comes from the bad luck of Romans in the area of
    Mt. Vesuvius.
  • Volcanic ash covered many Roman villas at
    Pompeii, Herculaneum and Boscorealle.
  • Much of our knowledge comes from excavations of
    these sites.

8
Roman Villas Painted Decoration
Artists reconstruction of a villas painted
decoration by art historian Bettina Bergmann.
9
Roman Painting Four StylesThe First Style
  • The First Style
  • This sometimes is referred to as the masonry
    style.
  • This involved geometrical patterns, especially
    blockwork.
  • Walls are often painted to imitate marble.

10
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Second Style
  • The Second Style involved
  • Theatrical settings, like painted cityscapes.
  • The illusion of space is created.

11
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Second Style
  • The Second Style
  • This often involved inter-connected scenes that
    show a story such as that of the walls in
    Pompeiis Villa of the Mysteries.

12
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Second Style
Wall from Pompeiis Villa of the Mysteries
13
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Second Style
Pompeiis Villa of the Mysteries
14
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Third Style
  • The Third Style involved
  • Movement away from architectural illusion and a
    turning to surface effects.
  • Pretty natural settings were often favoured.

15
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Third Style
  • The third style is often highly ornate.
  • The decoration serves to frame smaller individual
    works of art.

16
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Fourth Style
  • The fourth style involved
  • Ecclectic designs including a revival of the
    second style.
  • Painted narrative scenes.

17
Roman Painting Four StylesThe Fourth Style
  • This style is often marked by highly ornate
    images that reveal the artists close observation
    of how light plays on objects

18
Roman Painting
  • The naturalism and realism of Roman painting of
    the Republic and Imperial periods was quite
    remarkable and unsurpassed for over a thousand
    years, until the Renaissance.

19
Roman Painting Portraiture
  • Unlike the Greeks, the Romans were keen to
    preserve accurate images of the dead.
  • This probably originated in the Roman veneration
    of ancestors.
  • Accurate images were made in death masks, busts
    and paintings.
  • Romans had no desire to annoy the dead.

20
Roman Painting - Portraiture
  • One of the richest sources of Roman portraiture
    is Fayum, in Egypt.
  • Images of the dead lay in sarcophaguses during
    the Roman period, as before. What is new is the
    amazing realism of the encaustic painted images
    that have been recovered here.

21
Roman Painting PortraitureThe Fayum Mummy
Images
22
Roman Painting Christian Influence
  • As in sculpture, Roman mosaics and paintings
    turned increasingly away from realism and toward
    symbolism.
  • Figures are made more spiritual by separating
    them from a realistic background. They seem to
    float in space

23
Roman Painting Christian Influence
  • This symbolic style, which began to be used in
    the catacombs of Rome and other Christian centers
    became the dominant art form of both the
    Byzantine Empire and the Germanic Christian West.
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