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Sculpture in the applied arts

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Western arts

Of the miniature forms of sculpture, none is more attractive than the art of modelling—in relief or in the round—in fine, white stucco. Decorative stucco work was cheaper and easier to produce than carving in stone or marble. Soft and delicate in texture, it was equally elegant whether left white or gaily painted. In domestic architecture it was a useful alternative or accessory to painting; notable are such examples as a pure white, exquisite vault decoration showing ritual scenes with small-scale figures, from a late republican or early imperial house near the Villa Farnesina in Trastevere; handsome pairs of large white griffins, framed in acanthus scrolls against a vivid red ground, in the late republican House of the Griffins on the Palatine; and a frieze depicting the story of the Iliad, in white figures on a bright blue background, in the House of the Cryptoporticus, or Homeric house, at Pompeii. For the use of this technique in palaces, the figure work in Domitian’s villa at Castel Gandolfo in the Alban hills can be cited; it can be found in such public buildings as the Stabian and Forum baths and the Temple of Isis at Pompeii. The loveliest and most extensive stucco relief work in a semiprivate shrine is that in the underground basilica near the Porta Maggiore, Rome, where the scenes all allude to the world beyond the grave, to the soul’s journey to it, and to the soul’s preparation for it in this life. Some of the best surviving stuccos are in tombs: the tomb of the Innocentii and the tomb of the Axe under the church of San Sebastiano on the Via Appia; the tombs of the Valerii and the Pancratii on the Via Latina (in the latter, stucco work is attractively combined with painting in the flat); and the tomb of the Valerii under St. Peter’s, Rome, where the interior walls of both the main and subsidiary chambers are almost completely covered with recesses, niches, and lunettes (semicircular or crescent-shaped spaces) containing stucco figures. The Vatican tomb of the Valerii must be reckoned as a classic place for the study of this delightful and all too scantily represented branch of Roman art.

Ivory was another popular material for miniature sculpture. It was worked in the round, in relief, and in such forms as small portraits, figurines, caskets, and furniture ornaments, of which the carved plaques composing the throne, or Cathedra of Maximianus, at Ravenna (probably 6th century) provide a notable instance. The consular and other diptychs comprise one of the most distinctive types of ivory relief work in the 4th and 5th centuries. Among them are masterpieces that kept alive the traditions of Hellenistic carving, such as a diptych of the Symmachi and Nicomachi families, and some outstandingly fine examples of late antique portraiture, such as the Probus diptych at Aosta with a double portrait of Honorius, the Felix diptych in Paris (dated 428), and one of Boethius, consul in 487, at Brescia. Fine examples of wood carving are panels with biblical scenes on the 5th-century door of the church of Santa Sabina on the Aventine.

Many types of carving in precious stones were practiced by Roman-age craftsmen, and it is to them that the credit goes for the majority of intaglios that have survived from ancient times. (Intaglios are engraved or incised figures depressed below the surface of the stone so that an impression from the design yields an image in relief.) The widespread taste for them is reflected in the many existing glass-paste imitations reproducing their subjects, which include portraits of both imperial and private persons, and a large variety of divine and mythological groups and figures, personifications, animals, etc. Many bear the signatures of Greek artists.

The most impressive series of Roman gems consists of cameos representing imperial persons. These are miniature reliefs cut in precious stones with different coloured strata (so that the relief is of a different colour from the ground), whereas intaglios, like the ancient seals mentioned earlier, were reliefs, as it were, in reverse, cut into the surface so that a true relief only emerges from an impression. Among the earliest surviving examples of the great imperial cameos are the Blacas onyx, portraying Augustus in the guise of Jupiter; the Gemma Augustea, a sardonyx (an onyx with parallel layers of sard) in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, and the Grand Camée de France, a sardonyx in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, which were probably carved under Caligula and present, respectively, the apotheosis of Augustus and of Tiberius, the latter with Divus Augustus, also; and a sardonyx cameo of Claudius with Jupiter’s aegis. Late antique examples of the craft are a rectangular sardonyx portraying Constantine the Great and members of his house and an onyx with busts of Honorius and Maria.

Other varieties of carving in precious stones are represented by a miniature head of a girl wearing the hair style of Messalina and Agrippina the Younger, which is cut in plasma; an onyx vase in the Braunschweigisches Landesmuseum, Braunschweig, possibly of the 1st century, depicting an emperor and empress as Triptolemus and Demeter; and a late-antique vase, carved in honey-coloured agate and decorated front and back with a naturalistic vine and with the head of Pan, cupped in acanthus, on either shoulder.

Closely akin to cameos and vessels cut in precious stones are their substitutes in opaque “cameo glass,” worked in two layers, with the designs standing out in white against a dark-blue or bright-blue background. To this class belong a blue vase from Pompeii, with Cupids gathering grapes; the Auldjo Vase, with an exquisitely naturalistic vine; and the celebrated Portland Vase, the scenes on which have always been the subject of scholarly controversy but are generally supposed to depict myths relating to the afterlife. Similar imitations of carving in precious stones are late antique diatreta (“cage cups”), the decoration of which is cut back from the outer surface of the mold-cast blank. This openwork ornamentation sometimes represents the crisscross meshes of a net, while on other vessels it consists of an elaborate figure scene, the design in either case being very deeply undercut and, for the most part, only connected with the background by short shanks of glass. Of the figured examples, the most spectacular surviving specimens are a dark-blue situla (“bucket”) with a hunting scene and a dull-green cup presenting the story of Lycurgus (“Rothschild Vase”). Of the other types of glass with figured decoration, molded cups with gladiatorial and circus scenes are characteristic of the early-imperial period; and the 4th-century glassworker’s craft is represented by vessels with cut or incised designs. Among the most important centres of glass production under the empire were Syria, Alexandria, and the Cologne region.

Figured terra-cotta tablewares (terra sigillata—a term often incorrectly stretched to cover plain wares) were cheaper versions of costly decorated silverwares. During the last century of the republic and in the early decades of the 1st century of the empire, Arretium (Arezzo) was the most flourishing centre of the manufacture of a fine type of red-gloss pottery. As signatures on the pots reveal, Italian firms often employed Greek and Eastern craftspeople, and the mythological and floral themes of the vessels’ molded ornamentation owe much to the inspiration of Hellenistic art.

From shortly before the mid-1st century ce onward, the markets enjoyed by Italian fabrics were captured by the products of potteries now established in southern, central, and eastern Gaul. These manufactured cheaper, more mass-produced, and aesthetically inferior red-gloss and black-gloss wares, popularly known as “Samian,” some varieties of which continued into the 4th century. The decoration of Gaulish pots was, for the most part, molded; but some vessels carry applied motifs made in individual molds, and others show designs incised to counterfeit cut glass. Yet another type of ornament was carried out in the barbotine technique, by which relief work was produced by trailing liquid clay across the surface of the pot. As regards the content of the decoration, themes from daily life were added to traditional subjects based on Greco-Roman mythology and on natural history. The E barbotine hunt cups (produced mainly at Castor, Northamptonshire) are the highlight of the native Romano-British potter’s craft.

A late-antique class of red-gloss pottery, known as late A ware, with scenes in relief from Greek mythology and from Roman spectacles, was manufactured in a southern Mediterranean area, probably Egypt.

Jocelyn M.C. Toynbee The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica