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FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY The Roman Case - Case study - The Burke/Lonvig Model Remember this drawing? The Roman Case The Roman Case Jung's approach to psychology has been influential in the field of depth psychology and in counter cultural movements across the globe. He emphasized understanding the psyche through exploring the worlds of dreams, art, mythology, world religion and philosophy. The Roman Case Walking in Rome. Seeing the highlights of Rome. The Forum of Rome, the Arch of Septimus Severus, the Arch of Titus, The Coliseum, Pantheon, The Trevi Fountain, The Spanish Stairs, Il Vitoriano, Museo Nazionale Romano Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme with floor mosaics, National Gallery of Modern Art - Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Circus Maximus, Piazza Navona, Bernini's fountains, Piazza Della Rotonda, Via Appia and the Catacombs, The Vatican, Michelangelo’s “Creation of Adam”,…….Tivoli. Travelling in Italy: Siena, Florence, Venice, Ravenna, Assisi, L’Aquila, Vieste, Monte Sant’Angelo, Andria, Castel Del Monte, Bari, Martina Franca, Locorotondo, Alberobello, Paestum, Sorrento, and Napoli. The Roman Case Sitting at a restaurant on Piazza della Rotonda. Looking up at Pantheon’s inscription on the gable: M·AGRIPPA·L·F·COS·TERTIVM·FECIT, which means “Marcus Agrippa, son of Lucius, consul for the third time, built this”. Drinking a cup of espresso. Philosophizing how amazing Rome is as inspiration for a series of art creations… “Septimius Severus” Inspired by the Arch of Septimus Severus erected A.D. 203 in The Forum of Rome by the emperor Septimus Severus The Roman Case The Roman Case “Coliseum” Inspired by my sons’ enthusiastic interest in gladiators, by the gladiators’ bloody fights, by the gladiator’s circumstances of life, and by the feeling of that violent atmosphere sitting quietly down on the first rows of the Coliseum listening to the high sounds of steel. The Roman Case “Fighting to the Death” Inspired by gladiators fighting to the death in the Coliseum in Rome The Roman Case “Via Sacra” Inspired by the "holy street" from Coliseum to the Arch of Titus in the Forum of Rome, by Via Appia, and by the streets in Saepinum, in Paestum, and in Pompei. The Roman Case “Adam and God” inspired by Michelangelo's (1475-1564) renaissance fresco "Creation of Adam" (1508-1512). It is part of the Sistine Chapel ceiling decoration in The Vatican Museums in Rome. The Roman Case “Pantheon” Inspired by the ceiling of Pantheon. Next time you stand in this huge church room looking at the hole in the ceiling try to take a closer look at the ceiling itself… The Roman Case “Casale di San Basilio” Inspired by a floor mosaic in axonometric perspective – military projection, by the vestibule of a Roman villa near the Casale di San Basilio on via Nomentana. The mosaic is from the first century BC. The floor mosaic was exhibited along with a large number of other mosaics at Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme The Roman Case “Italian Soul” Inspired by Italian colors. The Italian flag. Coliseum. Gladiators. Italian food. Italian wine. Italian lifestyle. Italian landscapes. Toscana. Italian culture in Rome. The Roman Case “Grotte Celoni” Inspired by a floor mosaic from the locality known as Grotte Celoni on Via Casilina. The Via Casilina was a road born from the fusion of two ancient roads in Italy: the Via Latina and the Via Labicana. It connected Rome to ancient Casilinum (today Capua near Naples). It entered Rome via Porta Maggiore, the most monumental gate of the Aurelian walls. The mosaic is from the end of the first century BC - beginning of the first century AD. The Roman Case “Roma” Inspired by the my youngest son's experience of a lifetime he saw a soccer team ROMA match on the Olympic Stadium in Rome. The Roman Case Italy outside Rome… The Roman Case “Opus Reticulatum” Inspired by buildings in Saepinum, Paestum, Pompei, by The Forum of Rome, and by antique masonry. Most frequent types of Roman faced concrete buildings are Opus Incertum, Opus Testaceum or Opus Reticulatum. The Roman Case ”Piazza san Marco” inspired by a stay in Venice, violin music, cups of espresso, Murano Glass and then the tiles of the square. There is a certain pattern of write tiles. The red dot is the glass stopper of the glass decanter, that I bought on Piazza san Marco. Murano Glass it was. The Roman Case ”San Francesco” Inspired by Francis of Assisi. By a stay in the beautiful town Assisi. And by Francis’ light view of Christianity, which is symbolized by the gray cross. The diametrically opposite to the view of the established church, which is symbolized by the black cross. The Roman Case “Castel Del Monte” Inspired by the legends about Castel del Monte in Puglia, Italy and by the mathematics and the astronomy behind. To construct the shape of the outer and inner wall: Draw 4 rectangles according to the golden ratio. The shorter side is multiplied by 1.618 and you have the length of the longer side. Arrange the rectangles crosswise rotating each 45 degrees. The walls are the two octagons. In 1996 Castel del Monte was included into the world heritage protected by UNESCO. The Roman Case Temple of Neptune Inspired by the temple of Neptune (Poseidon) in the Greek colony Poseidonia south of Salona - renamed to Paestum by the Romans The Roman Case Let’s see some (virtual) sculptures in Rome… The Roman Case Sky of Navona Piazza Navona, Rome The Roman Case Pray Piazza S. Pietro, Rome The Roman Case Septimus Severus - E45 Entrance to Rome The Roman Case The End FOR EDUCATIONAL USE ONLY COPYRIGHTS STEPHEN JOSEPH BURKE AND ASBJORN LONVIG