or
Priapus onto a panel which is held by a boy. Fresco from
Pompeii, 1st century Of the vast body of Roman painting we now have only a very few pockets of survivals, with many documented types not surviving at all, or doing so only from the very end of the period. The best known and most important pocket is the wall paintings from
Pompeii,
Herculaneum and other sites nearby, which show how residents of a wealthy seaside resort decorated their walls in the century or so before the fatal eruption of
Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. A
succession of dated styles have been defined and analysed by modern art historians beginning with
August Mau, showing increasing elaboration. Wall paintings of the same period have also been found from the remains of prominent aristocratic homes in Rome itself. Much of
Nero's palace in Rome, the
Domus Aurea, built in the 60s AD, survived as grottos; their paintings inspired the
grotesque style of painting popular during the Renaissance. We also have murals from houses identified with the emperor
Augustus and his wife
Livia, dating to beginning of the
first century AD. The
Casa della Farnesina is another prominent survival of the early Empire that gave up many paintings. Outside of Italy, many fragments of painted walls have been found throughout the Empire, but few complete pieces. In the Western provinces of the Empire most fragments date from after the year 200 AD. From
Roman Egypt there are a large number of what are known as
Fayum mummy portraits, bust portraits on wood added to the outside of
mummies by a Romanized middle class; despite their very distinct local character they are probably broadly representative of Roman style in painted portraits, which are otherwise entirely lost. and
Omphale, Roman fresco
Pompeian Fourth Style (45-79 AD),
Naples National Archaeological Museum, Italy Starting in the 3rd century AD and finishing by about 400 we have a large body of paintings from the
Catacombs of Rome, by no means all Christian, showing the later continuation of the domestic decorative tradition in a version adapted - probably not greatly adapted - for use in burial chambers, in what was probably a rather humbler social milieu than the largest houses in Pompeii. portrait found in
Trier,
Germany, which may depict
Constantia, half-sister to the emperor
Constantine. Nothing remains of the Greek paintings imported to Rome during the 4th and 5th centuries, or of the painting on wood done in Italy during that period. and of provincial and decorative paintings. Most of this wall painting was done using the
a secco (dry) method, but some
fresco paintings also existed in Roman times. There is
evidence from mosaics and a few inscriptions that some Roman paintings were adaptations or copies of earlier Greek works.
Landscape and vistas ,
Boscotrecase, Third style The main innovation of Roman painting compared to Greek art was the development of landscapes, in particular incorporating techniques of perspective, though true mathematical perspective developed 1,500 years later. Surface textures, shading, and coloration are well applied but scale and spatial depth was still not rendered accurately. Some landscapes were pure scenes of nature, particularly gardens with flowers and trees, while others were architectural vistas depicting urban buildings. Other landscapes show episodes from mythology, the most famous demonstrating scenes from the
Odyssey. In the cultural point of view, the art of the ancient East would have known landscape painting only as the backdrop to civil or military narrative scenes. This theory is defended by
Franz Wickhoff, is debatable. It is possible to see evidence of Greek knowledge of landscape portrayal in Plato's
Critias (107b–108b): ... and if we look at the portraiture of divine and of human bodies as executed by painters, in respect of the ease or difficulty with which they succeed in imitating their subjects in the opinion of onlookers, we shall notice in the first place that as regards the earth and mountains and rivers and woods and the whole of heaven, with the things that exist and move therein, we are content if a man is able to represent them with even a small degree of likeness ...
Still life Roman
still life subjects are often placed in illusionist niches or shelves and depict a variety of everyday objects including fruit, live and dead animals, seafood, and shells. Examples of the theme of the glass jar filled with water were skillfully painted and later served as models for the same subject often painted during the
Renaissance and
Baroque periods.
Portraits , a panel painting of the imperial family, c. 200 AD;
Antikensammlung, Berlin of a woman from
Roman Egypt with a ringlet hairstyle.
Royal Museum of Scotland.
Pliny complained of the declining state of Roman portrait art, "The painting of portraits which used to transmit through the ages the accurate likenesses of people, has entirely gone out ... Indolence has destroyed the arts." In Greece and Rome, wall painting was not considered as high art. The most prestigious form of art besides sculpture was
panel painting, i.e.
tempera or
encaustic painting on wooden panels. Unfortunately, since wood is a perishable material, only a very few examples of such paintings have survived, namely the
Severan Tondo from , a very routine official portrait from some provincial government office, and the well-known
Fayum mummy portraits, all from Roman Egypt, and almost certainly not of the highest contemporary quality. The portraits were attached to burial mummies at the face, from which almost all have now been detached. They usually depict a single person, showing the head, or head and upper chest, viewed frontally. The background is always monochrome, sometimes with decorative elements. In terms of artistic tradition, the images clearly derive more from Greco-Roman traditions than Egyptian ones. They are remarkably realistic, though variable in artistic quality, and may indicate that similar art which was widespread elsewhere but did not survive. A few portraits painted on glass and medals from the later empire have survived, as have coin portraits, some of which are considered very realistic as well.
Gold glass medallion in
Brescia (
Museo di Santa Giulia), most likely
Alexandrian, 3rd century AD
Gold glass, or gold sandwich glass, was a technique for fixing a layer of
gold leaf with a design between two fused layers of glass, developed in
Hellenistic glass and revived in the 3rd century AD. There are a very few large designs, including a very fine group of portraits from the 3rd century with added paint, but the great majority of the around 500 survivals are roundels that are the cut-off bottoms of wine cups or glasses used to mark and decorate graves in the
Catacombs of Rome by pressing them into the mortar. They predominantly date from the 4th and 5th centuries. Most are Christian, though there are many pagan and a few Jewish examples. It is likely that they were originally given as gifts on marriage, or festive occasions such as New Year. Their
iconography has been much studied, although artistically they are relatively unsophisticated. Their subjects are similar to the catacomb paintings, but with a difference balance including more portraiture. As time went on there was an increase in the depiction of saints. The same technique began to be used for gold
tesserae for mosaics in the mid-1st century in Rome, and by the 5th century these had become the standard background for religious mosaics. The earlier group are "among the most vivid portraits to survive from Early Christian times. They stare out at us with an extraordinary stern and melancholy intensity", and represent the best surviving indications of what high quality Roman portraiture could achieve in paint. The Gennadios medallion in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, is a fine example of an Alexandrian portrait on blue glass, using a rather more complex technique and naturalistic style than most Late Roman examples, including painting onto the gold to create shading, and with the Greek inscription showing local
dialect features. He had perhaps been given or commissioned the piece to celebrate victory in a musical competition. One of the most famous Alexandrian-style portrait medallions, with an inscription in Egyptian Greek, was later mounted in an
Early Medieval crux gemmata in
Brescia, in the mistaken belief that it showed the pious empress and
Gothic queen
Galla Placida and her children; in fact the knot in the central figure's dress may mark a devotee of
Isis. This is one of a group of 14 pieces dating to the 3rd century AD, all individualized secular portraits of high quality. The inscription on the medallion is written in the
Alexandrian dialect of Greek and hence most likely depicts a family from
Roman Egypt. The medallion has also been compared to other works of contemporaneous Roman-Egyptian artwork, such as the
Fayum mummy portraits. The later glasses from the catacombs have a level of portraiture that is rudimentary, with features, hairstyles and clothes all following stereotypical styles.
Genre scenes Roman genre scenes generally depict Romans at leisure and include gambling, music and sexual encounters. Some scenes depict gods and goddesses at leisure. These were paintings which showed triumphal entries after military victories, represented episodes from the war, and conquered regions and cities. Summary maps were drawn to highlight key points of the campaign.
Josephus describes the painting executed on the occasion of
Vespasian and
Titus's
sack of Jerusalem: There was also wrought gold and ivory fastened about them all; and many resemblances of the war, and those in several ways, and variety of contrivances, affording a most lively portraiture of itself. For there was to be seen a happy country laid waste, and entire squadrons of enemies slain; while some of them ran away, and some were carried into captivity; with walls of great altitude and magnitude overthrown and ruined by machines; with the strongest fortifications taken, and the walls of most populous cities upon the tops of hills seized on, and an army pouring itself within the walls; as also every place full of slaughter, and supplications of the enemies, when they were no longer able to lift up their hands in way of opposition. Fire also sent upon temples was here represented, and houses overthrown, and falling upon their owners: rivers also, after they came out of a large and melancholy desert, ran down, not into a land cultivated, nor as drink for men, or for cattle, but through a land still on fire upon every side; for the Jews related that such a thing they had undergone during this war. Now the workmanship of these representations was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things, that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it, as if they had been there really present. On the top of every one of these pageants was placed the commander of the city that was taken, and the manner wherein he was taken. These paintings have disappeared, but they likely influenced the composition of the historical reliefs carved on military
sarcophagi, the
Arch of Titus, and
Trajan's Column. This evidence underscores the significance of landscape painting, which sometimes tended towards being perspective plans.
Ranuccio also describes the oldest painting to be found in Rome, in a tomb on the
Esquiline Hill: This episode is difficult to pinpoint. One of Ranuccio's hypotheses is that it refers to a victory of the consul
Fabius Maximus Rullianus during the second war against
Samnites in 326 BC. The presentation of the figures with sizes proportional to their importance is typically Roman, and finds itself in plebeian reliefs. This painting is in the infancy of triumphal painting, and would have been accomplished by the beginning of the 3rd century BC to decorate the tomb. ==Sculpture==