Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Surface and Core: First Style Stucco as an Ideal Image of a Wall
3. Surface Qualities: Three-Dimensionality and Colour
4. Surfaces and Images
5. Surface and Physical Space: Symmetry/Axiality, Multiplication of Architectural Elements, and Scale
6. Surface and Social Space: Light and Richness of Details
7. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I owe great thanks to Thomas Lappi, Jessica Plant and the anonymous reviewers for critical comments on the text and Marcel Deckert for the formal editing. |
2 | On surfaces (and decoration) as interfaces, see Haug (2020, p. 531); on decoration as aesthetic work, see Haug (2020, p. 1)—referring to Böhme (2006, p. 26 f). |
3 | Bruno (1969); Corlaita Scagliarini (1974, pp. 7–10); Laidlaw (1985); Clarke (1991); Ling (1991); Barbet (2009); D’Auria (2010, 2011); Oriolo and Zanier (2011); Seiler (2011); D’Auria (2014); for a systematic collection of First Style examples of the Western Mediterranean, see Lappi (2020). For a comprehensive history of research, see Tarditi (2017); Lappi (2020, pp. 2–15). |
4 | In his monograph on the media character of images, Jones (2019, p. 40) discusses the First Style only in passing. Barry (2020) addresses the pictorial character of stones and discusses in this context also pictorial imitations of stones, especially marbles. He introduces important aspects on pictoriality and mediality (also for the First Style); however, without a systematic analysis of these aspects. |
5 | On the historicity of the two concepts, see Beyer and Spieß (2012); Haug (2015, pp. 9–29); Barham (2018); Platt (2018); Squire (2018, pp. 1–35). On the culturally specific construction of image and ornament, see Haug (2020, p. 540). |
6 | On the relative construction of image and ornament along the above-metioned parameters, see Haug (2020, p. 540), with bibliography. |
7 | For marble blocks, see Bruno (1969, p. 307); for veneer, see Mau (1907, p. 448 f.); see also McAlpine (2014, p. 85). |
8 | |
9 | Grave (2015, p. 29). |
10 | For false doors, see Bragantini (2003, pp. 189–91 Figures 5–7); Barbet (2009, p. 30 f.); Laidlaw (1985, p. 33). For false storeys, see Mau (1882, p. 32 f.); Dickmann (1999, p. 70); Leach (2004, p. 63); Bragantini (2003, p. 195 Figures 11 and 12); Aoyagi (1977, p. 118 f. Figure 62); (Haug 2020, 172 f.). |
11 | Haug (2020, p. 171 f.); see; Bragantini (2003, pp. 189–92 Figures 3, 5–8); see the upper floor in the atrium (A) of the Casa di C. Iulius Polybius (Haug 2020, p. 167 f. Figure 103) or the ‘temple’ architecture in the fauces of the Casa del Fauno (Haug 2020, p. 58 f. Figure 5); cf. Ling (1978, p. 16). |
12 | For the illusionary effect of false architecture, see Laidlaw (1985, p. 31 f.). |
13 | See Clarke (1991, p. 34), who dates these illogical tendencies to the transition toward the Second Style; cf. Jones (2019, p. 41), who unconvincingly claims a random wall structure; Haug (2020, p. 181). |
14 | This, however, does not imply that the First Style is “overtly fictive”, see Leach (2004, p. 60); Haug (2020, p. 541). |
15 | |
16 | Haug (2020, p. 181). |
17 | Laidlaw (1985, pp. 25–28 with appendix pp. 334–37); cf. Laidlaw (1975, p. 44); for chronology, see Barbet (2009, p. 25 f.). |
18 | |
19 | Mau (1902, p. 180). |
20 | Barry (2020, p. 94). See also Barry (2020, p. 95): “The representation of the wall is an idealization (even heroization) of its material possibilities, lifting the prose of construction into a creative dimension where it becomes a thing of poetry”. |
21 | Strässle (2014, p. 15) classifies this phenomenon as “Materialtransfer”: ‘Befreit’ man ein Material von seinen qualitativ-phänomenal-funktionalen Attributen bzw. inszeniert man es in Kontrast—oder auch nur in Devianz—dazu, können daraus Ästhetiken resultieren, die weder dem imitierten noch dem imitierenden Material zuschreibbar sind, sondern unter der perspektive der Intermaterialität überhaupt erst in den Blick genommen werden können. |
22 | See, for the plastic differentiation of stucco cornices, Lappi (2020, pp. 130–35). |
23 | |
24 | For examples outside of Pompeii, see Ling (1972, p. 18 f.). |
25 | |
26 | Haug (2020, p. 100). |
27 | See Ling (1972, p. 22). |
28 | For the Logge building in Populonia, about twenty painted lithotypes—subtypes of alabaster, breccia, and marble—were identified; see Cavari and Donati (2014, p. 63 f.); Cavari et al. (2015, p. 57); more generally, see McAlpine (2014, p. 99). |
29 | With a definition of transmateriality Engels (2022): “[Transmateriality] discards the idea of clear directionalities between an authentic material prototype and a replica (and, with this, an ‘origin’ in a temporal sense), and embraces the notion of a design network featuring complex interdependencies” see also Strässle (2014, esp. pp. 12–16); Wolf (2016, esp. p. 105); (Flecker n.d.). |
30 | McAlpine (2014, pp. 99–103). In my opinion, however, it is futile to identify individual rock types precisely, as is often done in research. Thomas Lappi drew my attention to the fact that the respective quarries were not yet exploited on a larger scale in the First Style period. Therefore, veins, grains and the colouring were in fact just known from stone vessels and other small objects. |
31 | For the ornamental character of the stone imitation, see Platt (2018, p. 259). |
32 | Sen. Ep. 86.6: operosa et in picturae modum variata circumlitio praetexitur; Mart. Ep. 8.55.6: marmore picta Nomas; Stat. Silv. 1.3.35 f.: marmora picturata lucentia vena; see Bradley (2006, p. 14); Platt (2018, p. 260); Barry (2020, p. 97). |
33 | |
34 | Haug (2020, p. 182). |
35 | |
36 | |
37 | |
38 | E.g., the cubiculum (15) of the Casa dei Quattro Stili (I 8,17); Parise Badoni (1990, p. 895 Figure 79); Laidlaw (1985, Pl. 32b); see Haug (2020, p. 166). |
39 | |
40 | |
41 | For a comprehensive list of figurative representations in the Eastern and Western Mediterranean, see Lappi (2020, pp. 123 f., 179–181 Table 1 f.). Lappi’s list of friezes, however, include also figurative scenes which are not part of a frieze but painted on ashlar blocks, see Lappi (2020, p. 124). |
42 | |
43 | |
44 | Haug (2020, p. 172 f. Figure 108); for other plastic wall elements outside of Pompeii, see Ling (1972, p. 18 f.) and most recently, including Pompeii, Lappi (2020, p. 135 n. 1235). |
45 | Cassetta and Costantino (2006, pp. 327–30, Pls. 96 f. (with interpretation as a branch or a necklace)); Cassetta (2011, p. 475 with Pls. 29b, 30a); Pesando (2008, p. 167 Figure 9); D’Auria (2014, p. 57 f.). |
46 | E.g., for Domus VI 16,26–27, see Seiler (2011, p. 504 Pl.s 31c. 32a–c). |
47 | |
48 | |
49 | Gallo and Iorio (2007, p. 31 f.) suggest different groups of motifs. Indeed, the stayr and muse are situated close together. For the western wall, however, I question the idea that the group of four pictures is inspired by the “sfera del mondo agonistico”. Additionally, I maintain that interpreting the swordsman and the women next to him as dominus and domina strains the picture too much; see Haug (2020, p. 180). |
50 | Similarly Barry (2020, p. 100 (using the example of the painted ‘relief’ in the Alexander exedra of the Casa del Fauno)). |
51 | For the concept of remediation, see Bolter and Grusin (2000, esp. pp. 22 f., 31 f.). |
52 | |
53 | For this process, Bolter and Grusin (2000, esp. pp. 21–62) coined the term remediation, “oscillating between immediacy (the total effacement of a medium) and hypermediacy (the marking out of mediation)” (Plant 2022, p.117 n. 20). |
54 | Mau (1882, p. 43). |
55 | Staub-Gierow (1994, p. 65 f.); Staub-Gierow (1997, p. 91 Figure 41); Laidlaw (1985, pp. 251 f. Figure 65); Oriolo and Zanier (2011, 488 f. assign the decorative elements of the first style to a redesign in early Augustan times); furthermore the western rear wall of peristyle (y) of the Casa di M. Epidius Sabinus (IX 1,22.29) also features half columns; see Sampaolo (1998, pp. 994–96, Figure 69). |
56 | For measures, see Strocka (1991, pp. 27, 29). |
57 | |
58 | Haug (2020, p. 184). |
59 | Haug (2020, p. 536). |
60 | The darkness of the tablinum of the Casa di Marcus Lucretius Fronto that limited the view to the upper zone, as postulated by Schmaltz (1989, p. 222 f.), cannot be confirmed. Even today, despite the reconstructed roof, the lighting conditions seem to correspond with those in Antiquity. |
61 | |
62 | For undifferentiated plinth zones, see Casa del Fauno’s (VI 12) vestibulum (5/26), fauces (IV/38), and cubiculum ((17/28) and (9/31)), which are coloured in yellow, and the western atrium’s alae and oecus (31/44) coloured in green, as well as cubiculum (10/31) and triclinium (12/35) in violet; Haug (2020, p. 158). |
63 | See, e.g., Casa del Fauno’s (VI 12) tablinum (13/33) and triclinia ((14/34) and (12/35)), as well as the exedra of Alexander (30/42) and the fauces (7/53); Haug (2020, p. 164). |
64 | For belts, see, e.g., Casa del Fauno’s (VI 12) vestibulum (5/26), fauces (IV/38), cubiculum (9/31), and tablinum (13/33); for fasciae, see Casa di M.s Pupius Rufus’s (VI 15,5) ala (g); for kyma reversa, see Casa del Fauno’s (VI 12) southern peristyle (I/36); Haug (2020, pp. 85 f., 158, 170). |
65 | As can be seen in the Casa del Fauno’s (VI 12) western atrium and domus’s (I 20,4) cubiculum (7) and Casa di Sallustio’s (VI 2,4) oecus (22). Haug (2020, p. 175). |
66 | See Casa del Fauno (VI 12), exedra of Alexander; Mau (1882, p. 51); de Vos Raaijmakers (1977, p. 35). |
67 | |
68 | |
69 | Wollheim (2003). With regard to media theory, see Engell and Vogl (2000, p. 10): “Media make something legible, audible, visible, perceivable, while simultaneously erasing itself and its constitutive involvement in this sensuality, thus becoming unperceivable, anesthetic”. Referring to this quote, see Krämer (2015, p. 31): “At the same time that media bring something forth, they themselves recede into the background; media enable something to be visualised, while simultaneously remaining invisible. Additionally, vice versa: only noise, dysfunction and disturbance make the medium itself noticeable”; for Roman paintings, see Jones (2019, pp. 152–54). |
70 | See also Jones (2019, p. 156 f.). |
71 | Bolter and Grusin (2000, p. 21): “Virtual reality is immersive, which means that it is a medium whose purpose is to disappear”. |
72 | See Boehm (1978, pp. 118–38). |
73 | With regard to later styles (which intensify the play with different media in the sense of metapictoriality), see Jones (2019, p. 137 f.); for stucco design strategies, see Plant (2022). |
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Haug, A. Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style. Arts 2022, 11, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts11010016
Haug A. Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style. Arts. 2022; 11(1):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts11010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleHaug, Annette. 2022. "Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style" Arts 11, no. 1: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts11010016
APA StyleHaug, A. (2022). Wall Surfaces as Interfaces: The First Pompeian Style. Arts, 11(1), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts11010016