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Roman Art and Architecture Key types studied Types of Roman Architecture • • • • • • • Temples Aqueducts Forum Theatres Amphitheatres Baths Palaces Types of Roman Art • • • • Frescoes Mosaics Sculpture Pottery Temples • Different styles all based on Greek fashion Maison Carree in Nimes, France Pantheon, Rome Aqueducts • Engineering feats designed to bring drinking water long distances to Roman cities and towns Note the use of arches. Why are they needed? Forum • The central meeting and market place of any Roman town. Often important people commissioned these for the public A reconstruction of the forum at Pompeii (Bay of Naples, Italy) Note the colonnades. What are these? Amphitheatres • The great stadia of Imperial Rome Twickenham, Eden Park and Homebush rolled into one! The Flavian Amphitheatre (aka Colosseum) -a reconstruction. -What common Roman building feature is used? Theatres • Adapted from the classic Greek style: used for dramatic presentations Theatre at Lepcis Magna, North Africa (modern Libya) - a long way from Rome but note the scale! Baths • The hallmark of Roman civilisation: elaborate hot and cold bathhouses with plunge pool, saunas and gymnasia Floor plan of Hadrian’s Baths at Lepcis Magna Baths The outdoor swimming pool at Lepcis Magna. Note the statuary and columns. They were visually stunning, not just useful. Palaces, Imperial houses • Lifestyles of the rich and famous! Many low-level buildings, gardens, water features. A reconstruction of Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli, just outside Rome. Much can be seen today Roman Art Frescoes • Another name for wall painting (as in Michaelangelo’s ceiling on the Sistine Chapel) A frescoe from Pompeii, buried after the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79. Note the theme: an exterior scene designed to make the interior seem more spacious Mosaics • Art created with tiles (tesserae) of glass, stone. These might appear on walls and floors Sculpture • Statues created in marble or, if good enough, bronze (using ‘lost wax’ method) Pottery, glassware • Romans enjoyed emulating the style of Greek painted vases and pottery • Roman glass was also of a very high quality • Metal (gold, silver) dinnerware was also highly decorated Examples • Red slip vase with image of Orpheus Column orders • • • • • Tuscan - plain, unfluted drum or tambour Doric - fluted, plain capital Ionic - fluted, volutes on capital Corinthian - fluted, acanthus leaves on capital Composite - fluted, acanthus leaves and volutes on capital • Three parts to column: base, drum (tambour), capital (top)