To call a woman "a Messalina" indicates a devious and sexually voracious personality. The historical figure and her fate were often used in the arts to make a moral point, but there was often as well a prurient fascination with her sexually liberated behaviour. In modern times, that has led to exaggerated works which have been described as romps. ,
Messalina, 1881,
Gothenburg Museum of Art The ambivalent attitude to Messalina can be seen in the late
mediaeval French prose work in the
J. Paul Getty Museum illustrated by the
Master of Boucicaut,
Tiberius, Messalina, and Caligula reproach one another in the midst of flames. It recounts a dialogue that takes place in hell between the three characters from the same imperial line. Messalina wins the debate by demonstrating that their sins were far worse than hers and suggests that they repent of their own wickedness before reproaching her as they had done. While Messalina's wicked behavior towards others is given full emphasis, and even exaggerated in early works, her sexual activities have been treated more sympathetically. In the 1524 illustrations of 16 sexual positions known as
I Modi, each was named after a couple from Classical history or myth, which included "Messalina in the Booth of Lisisca". Although early editions were destroyed by religious censorship,
Agostino Caracci's later copies have survived (see above). Other artistic illustrations of Messalina's reported depravity, supposedly based on ancient medals and cameos, appear in the works of
Pierre-François Hugues d'Hancarville. His main account, padded with more general quotations condemning the laxity of the times, takes up three chapters of his
Monuments of the Private Lives of the Twelve Caesars (1780). Chapter 29 deals with Messalina's public marriage to Gaius Silius. The following chapters are illustrated by cameos ascribed to a certain Pythodorus of Trallès. In the first, Messalina sits naked while a maid dresses her hair in preparation for taking up her role as the courtesan Lisisica; in the other she offers fourteen myrtle wreaths to
Priapus following her triumph in exhausting as many fit young men in a sexual contest. She also sits before a private shrine to Priapus in an illustration for the author's other pornographic work,
Monuments of the Secret Cult of Roman Women (1787).
Later painting and sculpture One of the avenues to drawing a moral lesson from the story of Messalina in painting was to picture her violent end. An early example was
Francesco Solimena's
The Death of Messalina (1708). In this scene of vigorous action, a Roman soldier pulls back his arm to stab the Empress while fending off her mother. A witness in armour observes calmly from the shadows in the background.
Georges Rochegrosse's painting of 1916 is a reprise of the same scene. A mourning woman dressed in black leaves with her face covered as a soldier drags back Messalina's head, watched by a courtier with the order for execution in his hand. The Danish royal painter
Nicolai Abildgaard, however, preferred to feature "The Dying Messalina and her Mother" (1797) in a quieter setting. The mother weeps beside her daughter as she lies extended on the ground in a garden setting. In 1870 the French committee for the
Prix de Rome set Messalina's death as the competition subject for that year. The winning entry by
Fernand Lematte,
The Death of Messalina, is based on the description of the occasion by
Tacitus. Following the decision that she must die, "Evodus, one of the freedmen, was appointed to watch and complete the affair. Hurrying on before with all speed to the gardens, he found Messalina stretched upon the ground, while by her side sat Lepida, her mother, who, though estranged from her daughter in prosperity, was now melted to pity by her inevitable doom, and urged her not to wait for the executioner". In Messalina's hand is the thin dagger that she dare not use, while Evodus bends over her threateningly and Lepida tries to fend him off. In an earlier French treatment by , the lesson of poetic justice is made plainer by specifically identifying the scene of Messalina's death as the garden which she had obtained by having its former owner executed on a false charge. Now she crouches at the foot of a wall carved with the name of Lucullus and is condemned by the dark-clothed intermediary as a soldier advances on her drawing his sword. Two Low Countries painters emphasised the behaviour of Messalina that led up to her end by picturing her wedding with Gaius Silius. The one by
Nicolaus Knüpfer, dated about 1650, is so like contemporary brothel scenes that its subject is ambiguous and has been disputed. A richly dressed drunkard lies back on a bed between two women while companions look anxiously out of the window and another struggles to draw his sword. The later "Landscape with Messalina's Wedding" by
Victor Honoré Janssens pictures the seated empress being attired before the ceremony. Neither scene looks much like a wedding, but rather they indicate the age's sense of moral outrage at this travesty of marriage. That was further underlined by a contemporary
Tarot card in which card 6, normally titled "
The Lover(s)", has been retitled "Shameless" (
impudique) and pictures Messalina leaning against a carved chest. Beneath is the explanation that "she reached such a point of insolence that, because of the stupidity of her husband, she dared to marry a young Roman publicly in the Emperor's absence". The wild scenes following the wedding that took place in Rome are dramatised by Tacitus. "Messalina meanwhile, more wildly profligate than ever, was celebrating in mid-autumn a
representation of the vintage in her new home. The presses were being trodden; the vats were overflowing; women girt with skins were dancing, as
Bacchanals dance in their worship or their frenzy. Messalina with flowing hair shook the
thyrsus, and Silius at her side, crowned with ivy and wearing the
buskin, moved his head to some lascivious chorus". Such was the scene of drunken nudity painted by
:fr:Gustave Surand in 1905. (1884),
Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes Other artists show similar scenes of debauchery or, like the Italian A. Pigma in
When Claudius is away, Messalina will play (1911), hint that it will soon follow. What was to follow is depicted in
Federico Faruffini's
The orgies of Messalina (1867–1868). A more private liaison is treated in
Joaquín Sorolla's
Messalina in the Arms of the Gladiator (1886). This takes place in an interior, with the empress reclining bare breasted against the knees of a naked gladiator. Juvenal's account of her nights spent in the brothel is commonly portrayed.
Gustave Moreau painted her leading another man onto the bed while an exhausted prostitute sleeps in the background, while in Paul Rouffio's painting of 1875 she reclines bare-breasted as a slave offers grapes. The Dane
Peder Severin Krøyer depicted her standing, her full body apparent under the thin material of her dress. The ranks of her customers are just visible behind the curtain against which she stands (see above). Two drawings by
Aubrey Beardsley were produced for a private printing of Juvenal's satires (1897). The one titled
Messalina and her companion showed her on the way to the brothel, while a rejected drawing is usually titled
Messalina returning from the bath. About that period, too, Roman resident
Pavel Svedomsky reimagined the historical scene. There the disguised seductress is at work in a light-suffused alley, enticing a passer-by into the brothel from which a maid looks out anxiously. Alternatively, artists drew on Pliny's account of her sex competition. The Brazilian Henrique Bernardelli (1857–1936) showed her lying across the bed at the moment of exhaustion afterwards. So also did
Eugène Cyrille Brunet's dramatic marble sculpture, dating from 1884 (see above), while in the Czech
Jan Štursa's standing statue of 1912 she is holding a last piece of clothing by her side at the outset. ==Drama and spectacle==