Roman Wall Painting and Mosaics
This topic studies the painted walls and decorative mosaics of the Roman world—especially the richly preserved decoration of Pompeii and Herculaneum—as evidence for art, taste, and the use of domestic space.
Definition
The study of Roman painted wall decoration and mosaic floors and walls, encompassing their technique, style, iconography, and architectural context.
Scope
It covers the techniques, styles, and subjects of Roman wall painting and floor mosaics, including the classic 'Four Styles' of Pompeian painting and the development of figural and geometric mosaics across the empire. The topic examines how decoration related to architecture and the social use of rooms, what its imagery reveals about myth, status, and daily life, and how it is studied within its archaeological context.
Core questions
- How were Roman wall paintings and mosaics made?
- How did decorative styles develop, such as the Pompeian Four Styles?
- How did decoration relate to the use and status of rooms?
- What do images reveal about myth, taste, and daily life?
Key theories
- The Four Styles of Pompeian painting
- The classification of Roman wall painting into four successive styles, originally defined by Mau, used to date and interpret the decoration of houses, especially around the Bay of Naples.
- Decoration and social space
- Clarke's approach linking the choice and placement of decoration to the social functions and hierarchy of rooms within the Roman house.
History
The study of Roman painting and mosaics was transformed by the excavation of Pompeii and Herculaneum, whose buried decoration survives in unusual completeness. Mau's classification of the Four Styles in the late nineteenth century provided a framework still in use, and scholarship has since linked decoration to architecture, social space, and iconographic meaning.
Debates
- Meaning of domestic imagery
- Scholars debate how far the mythological and other images chosen for Roman houses carried specific meanings or expressed the status, taste, and aspirations of their owners.
Key figures
- Roger Ling
- John R. Clarke
- August Mau
Related topics
Seminal works
- ling1991
- lingmosaics1998
- clarke1991
Frequently asked questions
- What are the Pompeian Four Styles?
- They are four successive styles of Roman wall painting first defined by August Mau, ranging from imitation masonry to elaborate architectural and figural schemes, used to date and study decoration.
- How were Roman mosaics made?
- Roman mosaics were made by setting small cut pieces of stone, glass, or ceramic, called tesserae, into a prepared bed to form geometric or figural designs, mainly on floors.