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Roman Wall Painting

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Roman Wall Painting Pompeii Pompeii was not an artistic centre but a small seaside resort. There may have been regional differences and differences in personal taste ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Roman Wall Painting


1
Roman Wall Painting
2
Pompeii
  • Pompeii was not an artistic centre but a small
    seaside resort.
  • There may have been regional differences and
    differences in personal taste in the art work
    found there.
  • Paintings there are dated from 200BC to 79 AD

3
Pompeian Paintings
  • Quality of paintings depended on the skill of
    the artist and the cost of the work
  • Paint was applied to wet plaster
  • Alabaster dust was superior to plain white paint
    as a surface

4
Paint
  • The paint quality varied
  • Cinnabar from Spain was more expensive than local
    earth pigments such as red ochre

5
Expensive Pigments
  • Cinnabar deep red
  • Gold leaf

6
Basic Pigments
  • Red-red ochre or haematite
  • Black soot
  • White chalk
  • Yellow yellow ochre
  • Green terre verte (different minerals)
  • Blue copper calcium silicate

7
Painting
  • Walls were painted while still wet and could not
    be moved
  • The last layer of plaster was applied to the
    section of wall that could be finished
  • Walls were therefore divided into sections
    giornata di lavoro

8
  • Walls were often divided into three sections
    horizontally - dado, middle, upper
  • Paintings were rarely finished in one go
  • The picture was etched onto the wet plaster and
    essentially coloured in
  • Sometimes different artists were employed to
    complete different sections

9
  • Sometimes important sections were done in the
    artists studio and inserted into the finished
    space on completion

10
Plastering
  • Wall had to be rough enough to hold the plaster
  • Plaster was made from lime (calcium hydroxide)
    and water.
  • Sometimes grit was added to aid the drying
    process
  • For top coats the grit was often marble dust

11
  • Wealthy patrons could afford up to 6 layers of
    plaster applied

12
Tradesmens Tools
  • Applied with a trulla a trowel
  • Smoothed with liaculum float
  • Sometimes applied with thick bristles

13
The Four Pompeian StylesThe First Style
  • Dating from first century BC
  • Also called masonry style
  • Copied from Hellenistic styles
  • Plaster was applied to resemble cut stone blocks
  • Often painted to resemble different types of
    stone such as marble or alabaster

14
The Second Style
  • 80BC
  • Light source incorporated into the painting to
    make columns appear real and includes shadows
  • Gives a three dimensional quality

House of the Gryphon in Rome Note three sections
15
  • The Second style developed into wide open
    scenes where myths and real people could be seen
  • The Villa of the Mysteries shows two contrasting
    panes the flat wall and the figures
  • The room is opened up

16
The Third Style
  • Return to a flat wall
  • Monochromatic colours black white red
  • Three levels of wall
  • Overlaid with fantastical ornamental detail
  • Columns are now thin and spindly and often
    replaced with candelabra
  • Small scenessacro-idyllic scenes were popular
  • This style was fashionable for decades

17
The Fourth Style
  • Eclectic
  • Combines illusion of the Second Style with the
    delicate architecture of the Third
  • Many houses were redecorated in the Fourth Style
    after the earthquake of AD62 and continued in
    popularity after Vesuvius

18
  • It also consisted of a central panel with a
    glimpse of outdoors through a narrow opening
  • A second panel resembling a tapestry
  • Borders of a fabric style
  • Top panel architectural vignettes
  • Bottom section dado is plain
  • Elaborate decoration is essential to the Fourth
    Style

19
  • Miniature animals and mythological people
    appeared
  • Floral garlands were also popular
  • Influenced by Fabullus who painted Neros Domus
    Aurea

20
Bibliography
  • Campbell, Jonathan. Roman art and Architecture,
    Longman, Auckland, 2002.
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