A History of Roman Art. Steven L. Tuck
works and the meaning intended by the artist. For those stories illustrated by a single episode the moment selected falls into one of four categories: the initial moment of a story, the anticipatory moment (prior to the climax), the climactic moment, or the post‐climactic moment. Each gives a very different image and makes its own demands upon the viewer. The initial moment of the story only implies the further story to come. For example, the relief of a religious ceremony to found a Roman colony (Figure 3.24) need only show a Roman priest plowing while wearing his formal attire to convey the idea of the city about to be founded. The anticipatory moment relies on dramatic tension rather than explicit action to allude to a story. The tomb painting of Achilles and Troilus (Figure 2.23) illustrates the moment just before Achilles attacks and kills Troilus. The climactic moment is often the moment of the greatest action as the battle relief of the monument of Aemilius Paullus (Figure 4.31) uses to great effect. The post‐climactic scene often allows artists to concentrate on the emotional effect of an event or its outcome. The relief of the Emperor Trajan being crowned by Victory herself (Figure 8.23) carries with it the notion of the battles won without showing them more directly.
The various solutions for telling a story with multiple scenes were developed by Greek artists as they worked to create recognizable mythological narration. The major conventions are episodic, continuous, and synoptic narrative. Episodic narrative consists of a story told in a series of separate episodes, usually, but not invariably, arranged in chronological order. The Hadrianic Hunting Tondi (Figure 8.27) with their paired scenes of hunting and post‐hunt sacrifice are episodic. Continuous narrative tells a story in one work of art usually with the same characters portrayed repeatedly to create a sequence. The repeated figures are not separated by borders as are episodic scenes. The Column of Marcus Aurelius (Figure 9.15) exemplifies one of the longest continuous narratives in Roman art. Synoptic narrative occurs when different elements or symbols of a story are placed in one image together to give a synopsis of the overall story. Sometimes devices such as placing the climactic scene in the foreground indicate the narrative sequence. The pediment relief sculpture from Temple A, Pyrgi (Figure 3.5) illustrates synoptic narrative. The figures in the lower foreground represent the climax of the story while those in the background fill out the narrative with pre‐ and post‐climactic secondary events from the same story.
Although these names are not applied explicitly to every work in the following chapters, that’s not to say that they cannot be. You are encouraged to ask which narrative moment a work represents and how that decision affects the presentation and meaning of the art. Your answers to these and other questions on the themes covered can serve as some of the building blocks of art historical studies.
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING
1 John R. Clarke, Art in the Lives of Ordinary Romans: Visual Representation and Non‐Elite Viewers in Italy, 100 B.C.–A.D. 315 (Berkeley 2003). Examines the art designed for and sometimes created by slaves, former slaves, foreigners, and the free poor in the Roman world.
2 Christopher H. Hallett, The Roman Nude: Heroic Portrait Statuary 200 B.C.–A.D. 300 (Oxford University Press 2005). Surveys the many examples of male and female nude portrait and sets them in cultural context. Investigates the origins and Roman understanding of these portraits using nudity as an important form of costume.
3 Tonio Hölscher, The Language of Images in Roman Art (Cambridge University Press 2004). If you don’t believe me that Roman art operates as a semantic system that expresses values, this book will convince you. Gives a great deal of attention to the role of Greek art in later Roman art.
4 Elizabeth Marlowe, Shaky Ground: Context, Connoisseurship and the History of Roman Art (Bristol Classical Press 2013). The recent crisis in the world of antiquities collecting has prompted scholars and the general public to pay more attention than ever before to the questions of archaeological findspots and collecting history for newly found objects. This book argues that the question of archaeological origins should be the first one asked not only by museum acquisitions boards but by scholars as well.
5 Peter Stewart, The Social History of Roman Art (Cambridge University Press 2008). The character of Roman art history has changed in recent years. More than ever before, it is concerned with the role of art in ancient society, including the functions that it served and the values and assumptions that it reflects. Focusing on selected examples and themes, this book sets the images in context, explains how they have been interpreted, and points out where we have gone wrong in our interpretations of Roman art.
6 Jennifer Trimble, Women and Visual Replication in Roman Imperial Art and Culture (Cambridge University Press 2011). Focuses on the “Large Herculaneum Woman” statue type to assess how sameness helped to communicate a woman’s social identity. The author demonstrates how visual replication in the Roman Empire thus emerged as a means of constructing social power and articulating dynamic tensions between empire and individual localities.
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