,
Rome, unknown painter, 64–68 AD.
Early examples in Roman ornament In art, grotesques are ornamental arrangements of
arabesques with interlaced garlands and small and fantastic human and animal figures, usually set out in a
symmetrical pattern around some form of architectural framework, though this may be very flimsy. Such designs were fashionable in ancient
Rome, especially as fresco wall decoration and floor mosaic. Stylized versions, common in Imperial Roman decoration, were decried by
Vitruvius (c. 30 BC) who, in dismissing them as meaningless and illogical, offered the following description: For example, reeds are substituted for columns, fluted appendages with curly leaves and volutes take the place of pediments, candelabra support representations of shrines, and on top of their roofs grow slender stalks and volutes with human figures senselessly seated upon them. Emperor
Nero's palace in Rome, the
Domus Aurea, was rediscovered by chance in the late 15th century, buried in fifteen hundred years of land fill. Access into the palace's remains was from above, requiring visitors to be lowered into it using ropes as in a cave, or
grotte in Italian. The palace's wall decorations in
fresco and delicate
stucco were a revelation.
Etymology in Renaissance ,
Siena Cathedral,
Siena, Italy, by
Pinturicchio and his assistants, 1502–1503. The first appearance of the word
grottesche appears in a contract of 1502 for the
Piccolomini Library attached to the
duomo of
Siena. They were introduced by
Raphael Sanzio and his team of decorative painters, who developed
grottesche into a complete system of ornament in the
Loggias that are part of the series of
Raphael's Rooms in the
Vatican Palace, Rome. "The decorations astonished and charmed a generation of artists that was familiar with the grammar of the
classical orders but had not guessed till then that in their private houses the Romans had often disregarded those rules and had adopted instead a more fanciful and informal style that was all lightness, elegance and grace." In these grotesque decorations a tablet or candelabrum might provide a focus; frames were extended into scrolls that formed part of the surrounding designs as a kind of scaffold, as Peter Ward-Jackson noted. Light scrolling grotesques could be ordered by confining them within the framing of a pilaster to give them more structure.
Giovanni da Udine took up the theme of grotesques in decorating the
Villa Madama, the most influential of the new Roman villas. In the 16th century, such artistic license and irrationality was controversial matter.
Francisco de Holanda puts a defense in the mouth of
Michelangelo in his third dialogue of
Da Pintura Antiga, 1548: "this insatiable desire of man sometimes prefers to an ordinary building, with its pillars and doors, one falsely constructed in grotesque style, with pillars formed of children growing out of stalks of flowers, with
architraves and
cornices of branches of myrtle and doorways of reeds and other things, all seeming impossible and contrary to reason, yet it may be really great work if it is performed by a skillful artist." BLW Pilgrim Bottle, about 1560-1570.jpg|Pilgrim bottle, by the
Fontana workshop from
Urbino, Italy, 1560–1570, tin glazed earthenware (
majolica),
Victoria and Albert Museum, London Ceiling of Uffizi Gallery.jpg|Ceiling decorated with arabesques in the
Uffizi Gallery,
Florence, Italy, by various architects, including
Giorgio Vasari, 1560–1581 The Sistine Hall of the Vatican Library (2994335291).jpg|Ceilings decorated with grotesques in the
Vatican Library,
Vatican City, by
Domenico Fontana, 1587–1588 File:Fresco room Nobility in Villa d'Este (Tivoli).jpg|
Mother Nature is surrounded by
grottesche in this fresco detail from
Villa d'Este. File:Renaissance Grotesques Composition.jpg|Renaissance grotesque motifs in assorted formats
Mannerism . The delight of
Mannerist artists and their patrons in arcane iconographic programs available only to the erudite could be embodied in schemes of
grottesche,
Andrea Alciato's
Emblemata (1522) offered ready-made iconographic shorthand for vignettes. More familiar material for grotesques could be drawn from
Ovid's Metamorphoses. The
Vatican loggias, a
loggia corridor space in the
Apostolic Palace open to the elements on one side, were decorated around 1519 by
Raphael's large team of artists, with
Giovanni da Udine the main hand involved. Because of the relative unimportance of the space, and a desire to copy the Domus Aurea style, no large paintings were used, and the surfaces were mostly covered with grotesque designs on a white background, with paintings imitating sculptures in niches, and small figurative subjects in a revival of Ancient Roman style. This large array provided a repertoire of elements that were the basis for later artists across Europe. In Michelangelo's
Medici Chapel Giovanni da Udine composed during 1532–1533 "most beautiful sprays of foliage, rosettes and other ornaments in stucco and gold" in the coffers and "sprays of foliage, birds, masks and figures", with a result that did not please
Pope Clement VII Medici, however, nor
Giorgio Vasari, who whitewashed the grotesque decor in 1556.
Counter Reformation writers on the arts, notably Cardinal
Gabriele Paleotti, bishop of Bologna, turned upon
grottesche with a righteous vengeance. Vasari, echoing Vitruvius, described the style as follows: Other 16th-century writers on
grottesche included
Daniele Barbaro,
Pirro Ligorio and
Gian Paolo Lomazzo.
Engravings, woodwork, book illustration, decorations In the meantime, through the medium of
engravings the grotesque mode of surface ornament passed into the European artistic repertory of the 16th century, from Spain to Poland. A classic suite was that attributed to
Enea Vico, published in 1540–41 under an evocative explanatory title,
Leviores et extemporaneae picturae quas grotteschas vulgo vocant, "Light and extemporaneous pictures that are vulgarly called grotesques". Later
Mannerist versions, especially in engraving, tended to lose that initial lightness and be much more densely filled than the airy well-spaced style used by the Romans and Raphael. Soon
grottesche appeared in
marquetry (fine woodwork), in
maiolica produced above all at
Urbino from the late 1520s, then in book illustration and in other decorative uses. At
Fontainebleau Rosso Fiorentino and his team enriched the vocabulary of grotesques by combining them with the decorative form of
strapwork, the portrayal of leather straps in plaster or wood moldings, which forms an element in grotesques.
From Baroque to Victorian era In the 17th and 18th centuries the grotesque encompasses a wide field of
teratology (science of monsters) and artistic experimentation. The monstrous, for instance, often occurs as the notion of
play. The sportiveness of the grotesque category can be seen in the notion of the preternatural category of the
lusus naturae, in natural history writings and in cabinets of curiosities. The last vestiges of romance, such as the marvellous also provide opportunities for the presentation of the grotesque in, for instance, operatic spectacle. The mixed form of the novel was commonly described as grotesque – see for instance Fielding's "comic epic poem in prose" (
Joseph Andrews and
Tom Jones). Grotesque ornament received a further impetus from new discoveries of original Roman frescoes and stucchi at
Pompeii and the other buried sites round
Mount Vesuvius from the middle of the century. It continued in use, becoming increasingly heavy, in the
Empire Style and then in the
Victorian period, when designs often became as densely packed as in 16th-century engravings, and the elegance and fancy of the style tended to be lost. Groteskmask i guldtråd på schabrak, 1600-1650 - Skoklosters slott - 102320.tif|
Baroque – grotesque on a saddle pad, 1600–1650, gold thread Parlement de Bretagne - Grande Chambre porte.jpg|
Baroque – grotesques on a door in the
Palais du Parlement de Bretagne,
Rennes, France, unknown architect, sculptor and painter, 17th century (
Louis XIV era) Hôtel Colbert de Villacerf 1.jpg|Baroque – grotesques on the
boiserie of a room from the
Hôtel Colbert de Villacerf, now in the
Musée Carnavalet, Paris, unknown architect, sculptor and painter, 1650 Detail of the Galerie d'Apollon (14).jpg|Baroque – grotesques on a door in the
Galerie d'Apollon,
Louvre Palace, Paris, by
Louis Le Vau and
Charles Le Brun, after 1661 Boudoir de la reine, Château de Fontainebleau.jpg|
Louis XVI style – the Boudoir of Marie-Antoinette,
Palace of Fontainebleau,
Fontainebleau, France, decorated with arabesques in the Pompeiian Style, by the Rousseau brothers, 1785 Pierre Rousseau - Double-Leaf Doors - 1942.2.12 - Cleveland Museum of Art.tif|
Neoclassical – door, by
Pierre Rousseau, 1790s, oil on panel,
Cleveland Museum of Art,
Cleveland, US Vase with scenes of storm on land MET DP335261 (cropped).jpg|Neoclassical – vase with scenes of storm on land and grotesques, by the
Duc d'Angoulême's porcelain factory, 1797–1798, hard-paste porcelain,
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Boulevard du Temple (Paris), numéro 42, portail 06 grille en fonte.jpg|
Renaissance Revival –
cast iron door window grill of a building on the
Boulevard du Temple no. 42, Paris, unknown architect, 1850 File:Paris 7e 34 rue du Bac 27.JPG|Renaissance Revival – cast iron door window grill of
Rue du Bac no. 34, Paris, unknown architect, 1850 File:Paris Palais Royal Restaurant Grand Véfour Säulen 1.jpg|Neoclassical – interior of
Le Grand Véfour, Paris, by M.L. Viguet, 1852 File:Paris Palais Royal Restaurant Grand Véfour Säulen 2.jpg|Neoclassical – interior of
Le Grand Véfour, Paris, by M.L. Viguet, 1852 File:Paris Palais Royal Restaurant Grand Véfour Säulen 3.jpg|Neoclassical – interior of
Le Grand Véfour, Paris, by M.L. Viguet, 1852 Decorative arts in the Louvre - Room 545 (06).jpg|Eclectic – grotesques panel in the
Napoleon III Apartments of the Louvre Palace, unknown painted and designer, 1860 ==Extensions of the term in art==