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White marbles (once painted) of ancient Rome 

Ancient Rome Live
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The Ancient Romans first utilized local stones (tuffs) for building and decoration was limited to terracotta works (statuary, plaques). Infrequently and small amounts they employed marble. Things dramatically changed that they took control of the Mediterranean. The first marble temple dates to middle of the first century BCE, after the conquest of Carthage and much of the Greek world in the East. Romans took over quarries already known and exploited. They also opened up new quarries, in Italy, Luna/ Carrara marble. Abroad they focused on Greek island marbles and those of modern-day Turkey. Let's explore the white marbles of ancient Rome and discuss the painted colors that once adorned the statuary and architectural features.
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11 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 41   
@sheswede
@sheswede 2 года назад
It does make my imagination surge with the colors of the times. I think many envision the ancient world as so many people running around in white garments when it was as colorful then as it is today. In fact, for garments, white is one of the hardest colors to maintain, so I see even more color being the case. Great lecture.
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive Год назад
Thank you. YEs, there were vibrant colors- as vibrant on the paintings we need to enivision on marble- statuary and every architectural features.
@colinchampollion4420
@colinchampollion4420 5 месяцев назад
​@@AncientRomeLive WASP people use to make fun of all the vibrant colors of Mexico ~ & now they have all these gaudy colors in their classical European marble statuary 😮😂🎉!
@OmegaWolf747
@OmegaWolf747 День назад
The ancient world was as vibrantly colored as today's. 🎉
@reference2592
@reference2592 Год назад
Wow. Love lecturers like this. Thanks for sharing your expertise here.
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive Год назад
Our pleasure. Do check out our recent videos- from Roman bridges to the Via Appia journey (still in progress). We pride ourselves on bringing you to the real locations.
@mukankakuna
@mukankakuna 2 года назад
I would like to make a note regarding the reconstruction of the colors of the statue of Augustus. In the video it is shown and it is assumed that the aforementioned statue looked like this. The fact is that it is a fairly widespread error as a result of work done by Paolo Liverani. This work was intended to show what the base colors of the statue were but in no case, the reconstruction he made and on which this video is based, intends to say that his final appearance was that. To those base colors another layer of colors would be applied to obtain the final result (the final color). To have a more accurate image of what this statue would look like, look for the work that Jesús Mendiola and Emma Zahonero did on it or the video "The true colors of Augustus of Prima Porta".
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive Год назад
Indeed, it was an indication. There have been many more precise studies done - such as by J. Pollini... Thus the limitations on the images we had available for the lecture...
@matthewolivercarter4298
@matthewolivercarter4298 3 года назад
Excellent
@johngibson5169
@johngibson5169 3 года назад
Have you done a piece of how Roman portrait statuary was actually assembled, since much of it was obviously not carved from a single block of stone?
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 3 года назад
No we have not- would be nice to have some graphics to go along with it! On a later occasion, when we film in a museum we will be able to better illustrate.
@Redhand1949
@Redhand1949 9 месяцев назад
As always, seeing the video and reading the comments provide a wealth of fascinating information. In looking at the white marble, we see the bones of ancient Rome and not the flesh, so to speak. Thanks to Darius and fellow commenters.
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 9 месяцев назад
Thanks for sharing
@marthaarya167
@marthaarya167 3 года назад
Detailed!
@hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
"I found Rome a city of bricks and left it a city of marble." -Words attributed to Augustus
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive Год назад
So true. He also said "make haste slowly." Words to live by!
@stevemorris6855
@stevemorris6855 2 года назад
That head at the start looks like Elvis...
@AckzaTV
@AckzaTV 2 года назад
is this a vaporwave album cover? oh
@mattmcdonnellart
@mattmcdonnellart 4 месяца назад
Painting the statues makes sense, but why wouldn"t the painting be more sensitive? Think of things like The Moses Well, or those painted terrracotta's from the Renaissance? For example by Pietro Torrigiano? Whay would a sculptor labor for hundreds of hours allow his work to be so lazily painted?
@johngibson5169
@johngibson5169 2 года назад
How much of the Arch of Titus, other than the interior reliefs, is original and how much is restoration?
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 2 года назад
We will post a video on it/ the inner part of the arch with reliefs is original. The outer portion is a restoration by Valadier in the 19C.
@diegoragot655
@diegoragot655 3 года назад
Please, do not forget the Special video(s) of The Roman contributions in Jbala, Ghomera and Western Riff
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 3 года назад
please send email, details on your ideas to dar@romanculture.org
@diegoragot655
@diegoragot655 3 года назад
@@AncientRomeLive thank you
@charlesvanderhoog7056
@charlesvanderhoog7056 9 месяцев назад
Why don't you show how it would have looked when painted?
@terencefield3204
@terencefield3204 9 месяцев назад
As was the painting in the Middle Ages. We are monochrome now
@christskingdomiscoming5964
@christskingdomiscoming5964 9 месяцев назад
The thumbnail for this video reminds me of Mark Zuckerberg. Or is that just me?
@bobbybill4042
@bobbybill4042 2 года назад
I mean the skin would not have been left marble white... especially for a man but ya... however if you look at first style frescos in Roman houses the pillars are left white and some statues too... so who knows
@TWOCOWS1
@TWOCOWS1 3 года назад
Rationally, they must have been painted to look natural and alive, not this gaudy and comical product of silly internet "artists". Why would a people that carved into stone such magnificent and detailed human forms, paint them so carelessly, garishly and non-humanly?? Why would they carve a masterpiece in hard rock, to only paint it (the easiest part) in this laughable way?? The Roman portraits and frescoes are the best example of naturalistic paint (even the funerary masks, from way out there in the Roman Egypt). (Foundation colors should not be confused with surface colors either)
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 3 года назад
Yes that model of the Augustus Prima Porta is only for illustrative purposes- in the Vatican Museums still today- and gives an idea of the painting. (Traces exist - but are very faint on the Augustus PP). At any rate, there are many good scholarly studies (and recreations) that exist and on display in many museums these days.
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive 3 года назад
@@TWOCOWS1 That was the subject of a scholarly study (years old) created by the Vatican Museums- not sure what you mean. Please keep your comments constructive and polite. The purpose of our videos is educational in a positive manner. We expect the same in the comments. Thank you.
@TWOCOWS1
@TWOCOWS1 2 года назад
@@AncientRomeLive surely, but pls tell me what "impolite" thing I wrote so that I won't again. i hope you dont mean that any rational objection or criticism is automatically considered impolite?
@howtubeable
@howtubeable 2 года назад
I have to agree with Clarence Spencer. The colors depicted are much too flat. Why would the Romans hide the artistry of the sculptor with such flat and unshaded paint?
@TWOCOWS1
@TWOCOWS1 2 года назад
@@howtubeable hear hear! unfortunately, some people become bombastic, when you point at a glaring fault, no matter how rational. "my way or highway" remain the favorite motto.......
@snotnosewilly99
@snotnosewilly99 Год назад
Painted Greek and Roman statues look like cartoons.......the plain white statues looks vastly better.
@AncientRomeLive
@AncientRomeLive Год назад
The models we show that are painted are of cheap materials. Paint on original marble looks vastly better.
@misdefaith9869
@misdefaith9869 2 года назад
mostly all these statues were done in the 18th and 19th centuries.
@high_low_jack
@high_low_jack Год назад
Why do you use the term BCE? It's BC BCE is political correctness. I unsubscribe from people who use the term BCE
@evocati6523
@evocati6523 6 месяцев назад
Because the vernacular use of BC/AD doesn't account for a 33 year gap, and therefore makes no sense and has no place in any serious academic discussions
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