1 / 11

LATE ANTIQUITY

LATE ANTIQUITY. GARDINER CHAPTER 11-1 pp. 289-295. THE LATE ANITIQUE PERIOD. During the 3 rd and 4 th centuries a rapidly growing number of Romans rejected polytheism in favor of monotheism

torgny
Télécharger la présentation

LATE ANTIQUITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LATE ANTIQUITY GARDINER CHAPTER 11-1 pp. 289-295

  2. THE LATE ANITIQUE PERIOD • During the 3rd and 4th centuries a rapidly growing number of Romans rejected polytheism in favor of monotheism • Jewish and Christian art of the Late Antique period is no less Roman than a sarcophagus w/mythological scenes • Jewish and Christian sculptures, paintings and buildings of Late Antiquity are Roman in style and technique • This art differs in subject and function

  3. DURA-EUROPOS • Crosscurrents of Late Antiquity best seen in Roman city of Dura-Europos in Syria • Founded shortly after death of Alexander -> 2nd century BCE controlled by the Pathians -> captured by Trajan in 115 -> reverts to Parthian control -> retaken by Romans under Marcus Aurelius in 165 -> fell to the Sasanians in 256 -> abandoned after this • “Pompeii of the desert” • Samuel anoints David, detail of mural paintings in the synagogue, Dura-Europos, Syria, ca. 245-256 • Figures lack volume and shadow, stand in frontal rows, and have stylized gestures

  4. SYNAGOGUE PAINTINGS • Interior of the synagogue Dura-Europos, Syria, with wall paintings of Old Testament themes • Ca. 245-256 • Tempera on plaster • Surprise to scholars because it seemed to defy Jewish restictions against graven images/idols • God/YAHWEH -> never appears in these murals • Stylized gestures, expressionless features on figures, lacking volume and shadow, tend to stand in frontal rows • Niche housed the TORAH = scroll containing the PENTATEUCH

  5. CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY HOUSE • Restored cutaway view of Christian community house, Dura-Europos, Syria, 245-256 • 1 = former courtyard of private house • 2 = meeting hall • 3 = baptistery • Meeting hall created by removing wall, raised platform at one end -> could accommodate about 70 people • Baptistry had a font to conduct baptisms • Modest, second hand house in contrast to grand temples of the Roman gods

  6. THE CATACOMBS AND FUNERARY ARTS • Catacombs in Rome run for 60-90 miles -> house as many as 4 million bodies • Christians had to be buried outside a city’s wall on private property • First gallery dug 3 to 4 feet around -> in the walls of the gallery were cut openings/loculi on above the other like shelves for the bodies • Often small rooms/cubicula served as mortuary chapels • Once full -> new galleries were excavated at right angles -> when all lateral area covered lower levels were excavated • After Christianity was officially approved churches were built above the catacombs • Early Christian art = earliest preserved artworks having Christian subjects -> not art of Christians at the time of Jesus • Most Early Christian art = 3rd and 4thcdnturies -> most found in CATACOMBS = vast subterranean passageways and chambers designed as cemeteries for bury the dead • Catacombs tunneled out of tufa bedrock -> less elaborate but more extensive than Etruscan tombs

  7. Early Christian art presents Jesus as youthful and as either the Good Shepherd or as a teacher PAINTING • The Good Shepard, the story of Jonah, and orants, painted ceiling of the Catacomb of Saints Peter and Marcellinus, Rome, Italy, early 4th century • Painted ceiling of cubiculum in catacomb -> painted circular frame with a central medallion and LUNETTES/semicircular frames around the circumference • Story of Jonah in the lunettes -> Jonah honored as a PREFIGURATION of Christ • ORANTS = praying figures between the lunettes • Christ as the Good Shepard in central medallion -> lost sheep on his shoulders symbolizes sinner who has strayed and been rescued

  8. JEWISH SUBJECTS IN CHRISTIAN ART • The Old Testament figures prominently in Early Christian art in media • Jesus was a Jew • Many of the first Christians were converted Jews • Christians came to view persons and events in the Old Testament as prefigurations of New Testament persons and events • The 4 most popular Old Testament stories depicted in Early Christian art • ADAM AND EVER -> original sin -> Christ came to redeem us • SACRIFICE OF ISAAC -> Abraham is ordered by God to sacrifice his son Isaac -> prefigures the sacrifice of God’s only son, Jesus • JONAH -> prophet sins -> God sends storm -> Jonah has sailors throw him overboard -> whale swallows him -> Jonah prays then whale spits him out after 3 days -> prefigures the Resurrection • DANIEL -> prophet violates Persian ban on prayer -> thrown into den of lions -> God sends angel to shut the lions’ mouths -> Daniel emerges unharmed -> Christ’s triumph over death

  9. SANTA MARIA ANTIQUA SARCOPHAGUS • Sarcophagus with philosopher, orant, and Old and New Testament scenes, ca. 270, marble, Santa Maria Antiqua, Rome Story of Jonah orant + seated philosopher Christ as Good Shepherd baptism of Christ

  10. Scenes covering from Adam and Eve to Christ before Pilate JUNIUS BASSUS SARCOPHAGUS • Sarcophagus of JuniusBassus, from Rome, Italy, ca. 359, marble, 3’10” x 8’ • Sarcophagus of a wealthy, recently converted city prefect/official of Rome • Decorated on 3 sides -> two registers w/5 compartments framed by columns -> deceased does not appear on the body of the coffin -> stories from Old and New Testaments fill the niches • Central niches show Christ -> top he is enthroned between Peter and Paul, below entering Jerusalem on donkey -> scenes derive from imperial depictions • Scenes of the Crucifixion/Christ’s suffering and death rarely portrayed in Early Christian art

  11. STATUETTE OF CHRIST • Christ seated, from Civita Latina, Italy, ca. 350-375, marble, 2’4” high • Monumental statues become increasingly uncommon in the 4th century • Christians tended to suspect the freestanding statue -> linked it to idol worship of the pagans • No “cult statues”, or equivalents of pedimental statues or relief friezes of Greco-Roman temples

More Related