ALT SARCOPHAGUS WITH THE FALL OF PHAETHON, C. 170-180 CE. GALLERIE DEGLI UFFIZI.
This high-relief marble Roman sarcophagus once stood at the top of the Aracoeli steps in Rome and was a powerful influence on C16 art. Its deeply-undercut relief unfolds from left to right, capturing a narrative that dissolves into utter chaos. On the far left, Phaethon's grieving sisters, the Heliades, begin their transformation into poplars. The scene then erupts into a frenzied central spectacle where the four panicked chariot horses of the sun rear and twist violently in different directions above a small waterbird and the reclining river god Eridanus. On the right, calm divine figures witness the cosmic aftermath. The piece's true focus is the tragic figure of Phaethon himself, his limbs outstretched like the rays of the sun as he spins headfirst out of his chariot toward eternity, forever trapped in the terrifying moment just before his death.
#StandingStoneSunday
The inscription TO ME ('Thomas'). It once stood at Cwrt Isaf farm, Port Talbot, on the site of a medieval chapel of St Thomas. The site now lies beneath Port Talbot steelworks, close to the railway station. An eighth- or early ninth-century date. #History 🏴
"And so I gave myself to God /
There was a pregnant pause before he said OK". This #FrescoFriday takes us back to Cubiculum B of the #domus of the #Farnesina in #Rome, where a woman prepares to make a #libation to a #herm. The bedroom was not dedicated to #Venus alone.
ALT FRESCO PANEL, C. 20 BCE. PALAZZO MASSIMO ALLE TERME
A fresco panel, a pinax, from Cubiculum B of the domus of the Farnesina (ca. 20 BCE), Palazzo Massimo. Framed by a wide border of cinnabar red, a dark-ground panel depicts a woman seated before a stone herm of rustic Hermes. Wearing a white chiton and pale blue-green mantle, she sits in stillness, cradling an amphora as she composes herself in a moment of ritual purity (euphēmia) before making a libation. The herm holds a thin staff, his phallus occluded by his hand. This sacred-idyllic scene balances the room's other, explicitly erotic pinakes of couples embracing on beds. Together, these simulated panel paintings reflect the dual forces governing the bedroom: the physical passion of Venus and the restorative, pastoral quiet of Dionysian and Hermetic otium. The mix serves as an art gallery displaying the owner's Hellenistic taste, while transforming the private cubiculum into a sanctuary where the world's white noise falls silent.
That was a great small exhibition, and so great to see this one funerary sculpture. I wish I’d had my good camera then …
Given her turban, eye shape, and yakshi-like strands of jewelry, there’s speculation that she may originally have come from India.
📸 me (iPhone)
#FindsFriday A 2,000-year-old 'Tomb of Cerberus' with stunning frescoes discovered in #Italy
The fresco portrays the moment in the #myth of Heracles, where he captures Cerberus as part of his twelve labors. Credit: Ministry of Culture, Italy
#FrescoFriday#Archaeology#art
The lace-like marble of #Domitian’s #Alban theatre projected absolute majesty for a court of absolute terror. A late #ReliefWednesday look at the hyper-detailed "#Flavian#Baroque" gives us the architectural framework for the waking nightmare of proximity to the emperor.
ALT RABIRIUS.
DECORATIVE CARVING OF THE SUMMA CAVEA OF DOMITIAN'S THEATRE, LATE C1 CE. VILLA PONTIFICIA DI CASTEL GANDOLFO
Here we see a reconstruction of disparate pieces of a colonnade from the theatre in Domitian's villa, the Albanum. An ornate column capital supports a densely-carved entablature. The horizontal beams feature bands of repeating leaf motifs, delicate geometric patterns, and a rich figurative frieze where a winged griffin dissolves into swirling vines. Above, the lintel bears the architect Rabirius's signature, a unique double-ring motif carved into the spaces between the rectangular dentils. This hyper-detailed Flavian Baroque style rejected older, simpler designs to maximise dramatic chiaroscuro under the Italian sun, projecting raw imperial power. Yet this lace-like stonecarving formed a gilded cage, framing a court defined by psychological dread where the paranoid, universally reviled emperor Domitian terrified his ruling class.
#HillfortsWednesday
The Oppidum d'Ensérune is an #ancient hill-town (or oppidum) near the village of Nissan-lez-Ensérune, #France, located between Béziers and Narbonne. The settlement was occupied without interruption between the 6th century BC and 1st C AD.
#Archaeology#History
I'll meet you in the #Forum of #Sibidius. Where? This #EpigraphyTuesday gives us a statue base found in the otherwise mysterious forum near #palazzoAltemps in #Rome. Today in the #VaticanMuseums, it honours the forum's builder, our noble chum Acilius Glabrio Sibidius himself.
ALT DEDICATION ON STATUE BASE, 438 CE. VATICAN MUSEUMS
Here we find a large white marble statue base with an inscription that notably has its rubrication, the red paint in the incised letters, intact or restored, making the text leap out at the reader. This C5 honorific text dedicates a togate statue to the high-ranking official Acilius Glabrio Sibidius from his powerful son, Anicius Acilius Glabrio Faustus, the ordinary consul for the year 438. The text lists the father's career, including serving as Vicar of the Seven Provinces of Gaul and founder of the local forum. The letterforms mimic the elegant, serif-heavy Filocalian or Damasian style of the late C4, but the execution betrays a distinct technical decline in monumental craftsmanship, where lines visibly droop downward to the right, vertical stems wobble, and poor layout planning forces the word ACHAIA to clumsily breach the right-hand frame.
#MosaicMonday
Villa Armira is a 1st-century suburban #Roman villa in southeastern #Bulgaria, located in the proximity of Ivaylovgrad, Haskovo Province. Discovered in 1964 during reservoir construction.
Here’s a similar one at the #MANN, showing Erotes in a chariot race. Fantastic details of the circus. Of course, another indication that these were made for children are the small sizes - they couldn’t fit an adult.
📸 me
For #SpoliaSunday, an ancient boundary #cippus set back up by #PaulIV#Carafa in 1557, tying his increasingly shaky rule over #Rome to the authority of the ancient #Republic: a strange act for a pope so hostile to #classical#antiquity that he closed the papal statue collection.
ALT REPUBLICAN CIPPUS, MID-C1 BCE, REUSED BY PAUL IV, 1557. VICO JUGARIO
Standing by a wall below the Capitoline cliff, this vertical block of weathered cream travertine bears two eras of text on its flat face. At the top, Republican treasury prætors note using public funds to buy back private land to secure a road. Beneath, Pope Paul IV carved a text in 1557 during a destabilising war with Spain. With an invading army at the gates and Rome panicking over a second sack, the austere Carafa pope hijacked this stone. Though he loathed classical statues, hiding the Vatican collection from public view, he loved Roman law. He used this legal marker to graft papal authority onto ancient Republican civic jurisdiction, projecting absolute control while his pontificate descended into riot, starvation, and corruption. Remarkably, this text survived the violent riots and systemic erasure of the Carafa name that erupted immediately after his death in 1559, enduring quietly on a street corner.
Hildesheim Treasure
This #Roman#drinking vessel was part of the so-called Hildesheim #Treasure discovered by Prussian soldiers when they were expanding their shooting range at Hildesheim Galgenberg, in what is now #Germany, back in 1868.
#History#art
The Witham #Shield is an Iron Age decorative #Bronze shield facing of La Tène style, dating from about the 4th century BC. The shield was discovered in the River Witham in the vicinity of Washingborough, #England in 1826. (1/2) #Archaeology#History
"If the evidence does not fit the theory, it must be disposed of." For #SarcophagusSaturday in the #VaticanMuseums, this #Roman chest from 160-170 CE was radically recut with a curved front to fit a #neoclassical scheme, but retaining its original design of racing #Erotes.
ALT SARCOPHAGUS FRONT WITH CHARIOT RACE, 160-170 CE. VATICAN MUSEUMS
The high-relief scene depicts winged Erotes driving four-horse chariots in a chaotic race around the Circus Maximus spina, complete with miniature turning posts (metæ) and a dramatic chariot crash in the centre. In a Roman child's funerary context, the race symbolizes the course of human life, and the crash represents an untimely death. Modified in the 1780s by restorer Antonio Pazzaglia to fit Pope Pius VI’s neoclassical museum design, the original rectangular box was sawn into a flat slab, and its side edges were beveled into a curved profile. All original Roman paint was scraped off to achieve a pristine white marble look. The panel is mounted as a console table on two unrelated ancient marble table legs or trapezophora, which feature high-relief, roaring lion heads tapering down into muscular legs and clawed paws resting on flat bases.
ALT FRESCO WITH A CLIPEATE PORTRAIT OF HERAKLES ANTHIOS, 45-79 CE, FROM HERCULANEUM. MUSEO ARCHEOLOGICO NAZIONALE DI NAPOLI.
Here we have a handsome young Herakles, beardless but identifiable thanks to his clava or club. He is shown within a painted circular wreath against a brilliant blue background. Rather than the traditional laurel, his short, tousled hair is crowned with a delicate wreath of ivy leaves and dark corymbi or berry clusters, a specific iconographical detail that characterises him as Herakles Anthios, the flowered or youthful hero. This version of Herakles was closely linked to festive celebration and the theatre, a fitting patron for a town that claimed the hero as its mythical founder. Discovered during the disordered, unscientific Bourbon-era tunnelings of Herculaneum, the fresco was brutally hacked from its structural context, leaving its exact findspot a mystery. However, the use of exceptionally expensive Egyptian blue pigment strongly points to an elite setting.
#FindsFriday
ELMALI-BAYINDIR TUMULI.
Figurine found from the emergency excavations carried out at the tumuli discovered in Bayındır Village of the Township of Elmalı (Antalya Province) various metal and #ivory finds were uncovered. 📷My own.
#Archaeology#Art#artwork#History