San Rafael, CA
I took an Art History class this semester that is now coming to an end. A theme in my life has developed over the past couple of years of being astonished at some of the things I've become interested in. Yoga is a total no brainer on the astonishment scale. I mean who would have ever predicted that? If you had told me I'd be teaching yoga in the near future when I was anchored not long ago in Bequia, I would have accused you of shopping for fruit as a cover at the Rasta Man Stand. He sold more than fruit. As an aside
I am teaching class after class now, and loving it so.
Another pleasant surprise has been my Art History of the Greek & Roman World class. I give substantial credit to my professor, Heidi who is so dog gone passionate about the subject, that you just can't help but get swept up into her historical narrative. Art boring? NOT! I really learned a ton, and would have worn a Toga to class, but Dominican University has a Convent on the campus, and that would have been weird.
I wrote a paper about Roman power in Art after learning that the Saddam Hussein statue that was yanked down in Baghdad after the U.S. invasion in 2003 was inspired directly by the Romans. I started to do some more research, and I've come to learn almost all art is used to project messaging in some fashion. Anyway, below is the paper. Read it if you will or not. Maybe you'll see some connections. Jefferson's Monticello anyone?
CC
Ancient Greece is
the foundation to which The Roman Empire was built upon. In this essay, I
briefly explore how Roman art is based upon Greek art, and how this came to be.
Focusing in on the Roman Empire, I discuss the notion of propaganda, how the
Roman rulers used visual imagery, including architecture to assert, and
maintain power to control the Roman population. I will point to several rulers,
projects they initiated or completed, discussing how this effectively rippled
throughout an enormous area, creating a shared Roman culture.
ancandid.com |
I took an Art History class this semester that is now coming to an end. A theme in my life has developed over the past couple of years of being astonished at some of the things I've become interested in. Yoga is a total no brainer on the astonishment scale. I mean who would have ever predicted that? If you had told me I'd be teaching yoga in the near future when I was anchored not long ago in Bequia, I would have accused you of shopping for fruit as a cover at the Rasta Man Stand. He sold more than fruit. As an aside
I am teaching class after class now, and loving it so.
Another pleasant surprise has been my Art History of the Greek & Roman World class. I give substantial credit to my professor, Heidi who is so dog gone passionate about the subject, that you just can't help but get swept up into her historical narrative. Art boring? NOT! I really learned a ton, and would have worn a Toga to class, but Dominican University has a Convent on the campus, and that would have been weird.
I wrote a paper about Roman power in Art after learning that the Saddam Hussein statue that was yanked down in Baghdad after the U.S. invasion in 2003 was inspired directly by the Romans. I started to do some more research, and I've come to learn almost all art is used to project messaging in some fashion. Anyway, below is the paper. Read it if you will or not. Maybe you'll see some connections. Jefferson's Monticello anyone?
CC
Manifestation
of Power Via Art In the Roman Empire
Today
the Roman Empire is discussed in the context of a once great empire, its
spectacular fall spurred by unchecked pride. The inevitable comparison between
contemporary America, and her apparent hubris leading to over reach. The
breath, scope, achievements, and length of the Roman Empire are truly amazing.
Like all giants, the Romans stood upon the shoulders of those who came before. This
famous metaphor, “Standing on the shoulder of giants,” was propelled into our
modern lexicon by Sir Isaac Newton in 1676. However, the first usage of this
metaphor stretches back to ancient mythological Greece when Orion, the blind
giant god carries his servant Cedalion on his shoulders. Indeed, the Roman
ruler Hadrian highlights his respect for his much admired predecessor Trajan,
by inserting himself in panels on TheArch of Trajan at Benevento; thereby communicating to the Roman citizenry
whose shoulders he stands atop.
Pinpointing
the duration of the Roman Empire is difficult, and open to interpretation. However,
factually, it lasted a long time. Rome was founded roughly in 750 BCE, but at the
time was a simple town, and not a great empire. The traditional ending came
when Romulus Augustus was driven from power in 476 CE. Originally governed by
the Etruscans, who developed their own artistic style displayed mostly in their
palaces and tombs. In a cultural process known as Hellenization, after the founding of the Roman Republic in 500 BCE,
Roman art began taking its artistic cues less from the Etruscans, and more from
the Greeks as it came into contact with the flourishing Greek states in Italy.
However, art influence has no distinct line as “one important line of influence
from Greek art comes directly through the Etruscans traditions that Rome
adopted” (Ramage 33). The Romans absorbed Greek art, and their artists into the
Roman fold. Author Peter Stewart points to Roman art history as being “abnormal
in a variety of respects, but one of the most striking is the relative absence
of artists” (10). Most cultures tend to have a distinct art flavor that is
easily identified, however Roman art is lacking somewhat in a cultural identity
as a whole. This is not to imply that the Romans did not create. In fact they
did produce (copy?) an astounding number of pieces. They used their art to
build, maintain, propel, propagate, and shape Roman cultural values, thereby extending
the empire itself.
Art
is much more than an object to be admired for admirations sake. It’s used to
transmit messages to sway or assert any number of principles and values. Words
clearly have power, and a great orator can influence on a grand scale. Art does
the same thing, but in a more stealthily, impactful, and longer lasting fashion.
The centrality of rhetoric in Roman education is unquestioned. A rhetorician
was greatly respected in Roman civilization. What I will highlight is how the
Romans connected their respect for the speaking tradition to its art. “There is
thus an important parallel between rhetoric and the design of Augustan
statuary” (Oneonta.edu). The statue Augustus of Primaporta has “strong parallels
to the statue entitled the Doryphoros by
the Greek mid fifth-century BCE artist Polykleitos” (Oneonta.edu). The Augustus
of Primaporta has the idealized archetypical concept of what a male should
be. The extension of Augustus’s right arm is a symbol for speech connecting the
importance of rhetoric to the idealized masculine ruler poised and strong. The
Romans were masters in using “Art in the service of the state” (Ramage 19).
“Civic leaders were well aware of the power of art to promote their political
ends, during both the Republican period and the imperial age” (Ramage 19). The tendency of Roman rulers to use art as a
form of manipulation or propaganda seems to imply nefarious purposes. The term
propaganda has taken on a different meaning in contemporary society much like
the term rhetoric insinuates someone is full of it. The word propaganda
automatically triggers thoughts of less than altruistic motives. This is not
the case.
There
are two sides to propaganda coin. The notion that propaganda is only used for
subversive activity, or to sway a population to level its government is
incorrect. Author Jacques Ellul as quoted from Silverstein’s piece defines this
type of propaganda as the “propaganda of agitation” (49). Ellul goes on to
explain the more potent form of propaganda, a form that the Romans mastered. He
calls this “the ‘propaganda of integration’ to promote acceptance and support
among its citizens for that system” (Silverstein 49). This is relevant to the
Roman Empire, as the shear size and diversity of cultures conquered required a
methodology to promote the state for societal cohesion. Virtually all-Roman
rulers used art as “propaganda of integration” as “no society can function for
long without at least the implicit support of most of its citizens”
(Silverstein 50).
It’s
in this vain that the Roman rulers utilized art. Rome clearly exercised brute
force to project power, but its leaders realized this form ultimately would
fracture society, and not bind it together if used exclusively. “Insofar as
power is a matter of presentation, its cultural currency in antiquity (and
still today) was the creation, manipulation and display of images. In the
propagation of the imperial office, at any rate, art was power” (Elsner 53). In
the years prior to Augustus Caesar taking power in 31 BCE, Romans had spent
many grim years involved in a civil war that sapped the civilizations energy. Indeed
“an atmosphere of pessimism pervaded the Roman state, and there were many who,
in there own moral decadence, considered Rome on the edge of destruction”
(Zanker 1). Augustus ushered in 45 years of stability and prosperity. How did
he accomplish such a task? He engaged in a sustained, large scale, long-term cultural
program shifting the Roman mood, and art was his Modus Operandi.
Res Publica Restituta means “restored
the republic.” Augustus had saved the republic and now it was his duty to
restore it. “On the arch put up by the Senate for the victor in the civil war stood
the legend ‘res publica restitute’” (Zanker 90). A persistent reminder of the
societal debt owed to Augustus fostering their allegiance. In another example
of Augustus as savior of the republic, a coin was minted 10 years after he
returned power to the Roman Senate in 29 BCE. Stamped into the coin “the res
publica, represented in the scheme usual for a conquered province, kneels
before Augustus, and he helps her to her feet. The savior stands beside the
restored Republic, which is in need of his leadership” (Zanker 91-92).
The coin was
ubiquitous throughout the Roman Empire, and a small way (at least in physical
stature) to build Roman allegiance, and project the power of the ruler into the
citizen’s daily lives. However, during the Flavian’s reign, Vespasian
commissioned the enormous and consequential Colosseum,
originally named the Flavian Amphitheater.
“The message was surely not lost on the Roman people: the Colosseum was the grandest amphitheater anywhere”, and its purpose
was for “entertainment, including mock sea battles, gladiatorial games, and
wild beast hunts” (Ramage 170). This forum was wildly popular with the Romans,
and thus was useful to the leaders in building Roman nationalism. Images of the
games were found in numerous pieces of art including the “Campana relief with
gladiators, a panther, and a lion in the Circus Maximus” (Ramage 174).
Many art
historians have debated on the significance of the arena. The Colosseum, and other like facilities are
a complex piece to the Roman social fabric puzzle. The architecture itself, and
the innovations built into the Colosseum
shout out to the citizenry a message of greatness. In fact, sitting here 2000
years later, the glory of the Colosseum
makes me want to be Roman. This is power. Beyond the messaging of the structure
itself, “The arena plays an important role in the moralization and maintenance
of Roman social roles and hierarchical relations” (Gunderson 115). It can be
argued that the Colosseum, and other
like institutions, were built by the emperor with full knowledge the
institution was a social mechanism, a tool, used specifically to reinforce
social norms, and maintain the state power. Furthermore, the emperor could use
the institution as a barometer to gauge the mood of the governed.
In his essay, The Ideology of the Arena, Eric
Gunderson acknowledges previous scholars who “diagnose the ills of Roman society
and politics by interpreting its spectacles, their performance, and their
audience” (115). Gunderson goes much
deeper in his analysis of the meaning of the arena in Roman society. Some of
the spectacles present in the Colosseum
may be brutish to contemporary sensibilities, but the message that it propagated
to the wider Roman society, is less barbarous blood sport, and more about
societal structure as a whole. Gunderson writes, “The arena can thus be taken
as an apparatus which not only looks in upon a spectacle, but one which in its
organization and structure reproduces the relations subsisting between observer
and observed” (116). The seating arrangements in the arena was serious
business, and as far as the arena can be viewed as art, the various rulers of
the empire used the arena to make it crystal clear to which class one belonged.
“The Romans themselves were acutely aware that seating involved dignitas and honor” (Gunderson 124). In
fact, the seating arrangements don’t tell the entire classism story of Roman
society as a whole, as not all the populous was represented.
Gunderson’s thesis
is “the arena as an Ideological State Apparatus in Rome” in which the arena is
a factory of sorts that duplicates Romanness. He says, “the arena serves to
reproduce the Roman subject and thus acts as an instrument of the reproduction
of Romanness as a variously lived experience” (117). This idea of reproduction
of Romanness can be extended to numerous other Roman institutions, and works of
art. The precise engineering of the aqueducts, public baths, and the design of
Roman villas are all examples of unique Roman culture. They all are in some
form “ideological functionaries supporting and generating Roman social
structure” (Gunderson 117). Mary T. Boatwright’s study of Roman theaters also
supports Gunderson’s thesis. She writes “In the Roman world, theaters embodied
the close relationship of spectacles, religion, society, and politics” (185). Boatwright
also makes the distinction between the Hellenistic theaters of ancient Greece,
and the later Roman theaters. The Greeks tended to build into hillsides, where
as the Romans built actual structures, with enormous substructures. This
allowed the Romans to integrate urban planning into the structures to make it
“possible for prominent theatergoers to keep from mingling with other
spectators as they made their way to and from customary seats” (185). This is another
innovation allowing the state to exert control by design. The Romans also
embellished their theaters with significant works of art, usually portraying
gods or highlighting present or past emperors. In the theater of Orange in France for example, Augustus,
the first Roman emperor has been erected in a larger than life relief in the
“central niche of the scaena forns” (Boatwright 187). The first permanent
theater built by Pompey the Great in 55 BCE featured a prominent temple to
Venus. An interesting observation is the states consent in letting wealthy
benefactors contribute funds to the building of the theaters. In return the benefactors secured permanent
inscriptions into the building adding to their social position within society,
an ancillary benefit to the state, helping to keep the wealthy somewhat happy. A type of insurance policy against social agitation
by the wealthy.
In my final
example of the Roman state projecting power to its people via art, I turn back
to my favorite emperor, Augustus. The Ara
Pacis, or “Alter of Augustian Peace” is a tour de force in propaganda as integration. Commissioned by the
Roman Senate on July 4th 13 BCE for the specific purpose of
commemorating an age of peace ushered in by Augustus that extended throughout
the entire empire. The altar itself is
enclosed in marble with magnificent art adorned everywhere. “Attempts to
identify the source for the form of the altar have suggested close parallels to
the fifth century BCE Altar of the Twelve
Gods in the Agora in Athens. This is one of many links connecting the Roman
work to Greek and especially Athenian mid-fifth century monuments”
(Oneonta.edu). The panels on both sides of the entryway depict the legendary
founders of Rome, supporting my thesis of “standing on shoulders of giants.” The
four panels on the north, south, east and west sides contain significant
reliefs telling the Roman story. They contain “four major themes of Augustan
ideology: Piety and respect for
traditional custom (Aeneas sacrificing); War (Mars with Romulus and Remus); Victory (Roma with Honos and Virtus); Fruits of Peace (Tellus panel with the fertility of the land and
sea)” (Oneonta.edu). The Ara Pacis’s art
work covers nearly every significant value or principle that the Romans held
dear. The scenes depict the centrality of the family; the long lineage that
Augustus descended from, themes of honor, and dignity all support the notions
of a great empire.
In conclusion,
once I was trained to look at Roman works of art, and ask myself “what is this
piece trying to say?” I had a real paradigm shift. The Romans conquered far and
wide, were the first to realize the importance of urban planning to placate its
huge population. Numerous projects were undertaken by the rulers to propagate
Romaness, to build institutions to remind the citizenry of past emperors, and
their accomplishments. This served to send the signal that rising up against
the state was futile, and that the state is powerful. Besides look what the
empire is providing in the form of public baths and other like institutions. Who
wants to dash off to war when a hot bath is right around the corner? It made
the citizenry proud, and more prone to contribute to the empire instead of
chaffing against it.
In this essay, I
pointed to the Roman Empire’s reliance on ancient Greece to propel it greatness.
I discussed the term propaganda, explaining how the Romans used it via art to
great effect to integrate its massive conquered territory, and assimilate diverse
cultures. I used Augustus of Primaporta
as an example of the Roman emperor projecting his power, the message of
controlled masculinity, and expert rhetorician. I provide more support for the
manifestation of power via art by pointing to the Flavian Amphitheater, the symbol it provides, and its use in
providing Roman social structure. The Roman Empire was a complex, and a totally
absorbing society. I wish to study it further.
Works Cited
Art Department. SunyOnata, “Roman Power
and Roman Imperial Sculpture” Web. 04 Nov 2011. http://www.oneonta.edu/home/default.asp
“Blind
Orion Searching for the Rising Sun” 1658. Museum of Modern Art, New
York. The Artchive. Web. 04 Nov 2011.
Boatwright, Mary T. Hadrian and the Cities of
the Roman Empire. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 2000. Print.
Elsner,
Jaś. Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph : The Art of the Roman Empire AD
100-450. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
"Frequently
Asked Questions "Web. 10/30/2011 <http://www.roman-empire.net/diverse/faq.html>.
Gunderson,
Erik. "The Ideology of the Arena." Classical Antiquity 15.1
(1996): pp. 113-151. Web.
Ramage,
Nancy H., and Andrew Ramage. Roman Art : Romulus to Constantine.
[London]: Laurence King, 2005.
Ramage,
Nancy H., and Andrew Ramage. Roman Art : Romulus to Constantine. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001.
"The
Roman Empire "Web. 11/4/2011 <http://www.roman-empire.net/>.
Stewart,
Peter. The Social History of Roman Art. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge
University Press, 2008. Print.
Silverstein,
Brett. "Toward a Science of Propaganda." Political Psychology
8.1 (1987): pp. 49-59. Web.
Zanker,
Paul. The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus. Ann Arbor: University
of Michigan Press, 1988. Print.
2 comments:
Good to see you broadening your horizons,Roman art and just about anything ancient Roman is fascinating.Glad you enjoyed the class and you can see how a good teacher makes for an interesting class and this will carry over to your yoga teaching,
Dad
Hello;
I've enjoyed reading through your blog, especially the transition.
Isaac Newton's comment "standing on the shoulders of giants" has an interesting background. According to a science history book Isaac Newton and Robert Hooke were in a tiff and professional friends encouraged each to write a letter to the other to "make amends". Robert Hooke wrote first followed by Newton. Newton's letter included the "standing on the shoulders of giants" which may have been a very subtle barb as Hooke was a very short man. The comment is neither to add nor subtract from your paper, but is meant as an interesting side note.
R Wall
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