|
|

Domus Aurea
"Good! Now at last I can begin to live like a human being!"
Nero, on entering his Domus Aurea for the first time.
The Domus Aurea (Latin for "Golden House") was a large palace built by
the Roman emperor Nero after the fire that devastated Rome in 64. It is
possible that Nero may have set this fire himself to make way for his
Golden House. It has been said that Nero was seen playing a cithara and
declaiming impromptu poetry while the city burned as if he didn't care.
Built of brick (not marble as is sometimes imagined) in the few years
between the fire and Nero's suicide in 68, the extensive gold-leaf that
gave it its name was not the only extravagant element of its decor:
stuccoed ceilings were applied with semi-precious stones and veneers of
ivory. Pliny watched it being built (Natural History xxxvi. 111).
The Domus Aurea was comprised of a series of villas and pavilions
covering one third of then Rome open porticos to enjoy the artificial
views created where the heart of Rome had recently been. In the centre
of the grounds, which included forests, an altar in a sacred grove,
pastures with flocks, and vineyards rus in urbe, "Countryside in the
city" was a man-made lake. To plant a sacred grove as a garden feature
could not have avoided connotations of impiety among conservative Romans
of Senatorial rank. Nero also commissioned from the Greek Zenodorus a
colossal 37-meter bronze statue of himself, dressed in the garb of the
Roman sun-god Apollo, the Colossus Neronis, and placed it just outside
the main palace entrance. The colossus was revamped with the heads of
several succeeding emperors before Hadrian moved it to the Flavian
Amphitheater. This building took the name "Colosseum" in the Middle
Ages, after the statue nearby. The name stuck.
Romans excelled at the subversive art of graffiti. Someone inscribed a
wall
ROMA DOMUS FIET: VELOS MIGRATE QUIRITES
SINON ET VEIOS OCCUPET ISTA DOMUS
"Rome will become a dwelling house; to Veii flit apace,
Quirites, lest this house, before ye come, take up the place."
Beneath the wit, the idea that the genii loci, the Quirites of the
Quirinal hill, would have to abandon Rome gave a Roman reader of the
graffito a chill sense of foreboding.
The Golden House was a party villa 300 rooms and no sleeping quarters.
Nero's own palace remained on the Quirinal Hill. Strangely, no kitchens
or latrines have been rediscovered yet either.
Rooms sheathed in dazzling polished white marble were given richly
varied floor plans, shaped with niches and exedras that concentrated or
dispersed the daylight. There were pools in the floors and fountains
splashing in the corridors. Nero took great interest in every detail of
the project, according to Tacitus' Annals, and oversaw the architects,
Celer and Severus.
Some of the extravagances of the Domus Aurea had repercussions for the
future. The architects designed two of the principal dining rooms to
flank an octagonal court, surmounted by a dome with a giant central
oculus to let in light. It was probably the first use of a dome that was
not in a temple dedicated to the gods, such as the Pantheon, and an
early use of concrete construction. One innovation was destined to have
an enormous influence on the art of the future: Nero placed mosaics,
previously restricted to floors, in the vaulted ceilings. Only fragments
have survived, but that technique was to be copied extensively,
eventually ending up as a fundamental feature of Christian art: the apse
mosaics that decorate so many churches in Rome, Ravenna, Sicily and
Constantinople.
Celer and Severus also created an ingenious mechanism, cranked by
slaves, that made the ceiling underneath the dome revolve like the
heavens, while perfume was sprayed and rose petals were dropped on the
assembled diners such quantities of rose petals that one unlucky guest
was asphyxiated or was that part of the negative legend generated by
Nero's numerous enemies and his immediate Imperial successors?
"Nero gave the best parties, ever," archaeologist Wallace-Hadrill told
an interviewer when the Golden House was reopened to visitors in 1999
after being closed for years for restorations. "Three hundred years
after his death, tokens bearing his head were still being given out at
public spectacles - a memento of the greatest showman of them all."
Nero, who was obsessed with his status as an artist, certainly regarded
parties as works of art.
Frescos covered every surface that wasn't more richly finished. The main
artist was Fabullus. Fresco technique, working on damp plaster, demands
a speedy and sure touch: Fabullus and his studio covered a spectacular
amount of area. Pliny, in his Natural History, recounts how Fabullus
went for only a few hours each day to the Golden House, to work while
the light was right. The swiftness of Fabullus's execution gives a
wonderful unity to his compositions and astonishing delicacy to their
execution.
After Nero's death, the Golden House was a severe embarrassment to his
successors. It was stripped of its marble, its jewels and its ivory
within a decade. Soon after Neros death, the palace and grounds,
encompassing one square mile, were filled with earth and built over: the
Baths of Titus were already being built on part of the site in 79. On
the site of the lake in the middle of the palace grounds, Vespasian
built the Flavian Amphitheatre,
which could be reflooded at will, with the Colossus Neronis beside it.
The Baths of Trajan, and Temples of Venus and Rome were built on the
site. Within 40 years, the Golden House was completely obliterated,
buried beneath the new construction, but paradoxically this ensured that
the painted "grotesques" would survive; the sand worked as effectively
as did Pompeii's volcanic dust to preserve them from their perpetual
destroyer, damp.
When a young Roman inadvertently fell through a cleft in the Aventine
hillside at the end of the 15th century, he found himself in a strange
cave or grotta filled with painted figures. Soon the young artists of
Rome were having themselves let down on boards knotted to ropes to see
for themselves. The frescos that were uncovered then have faded to pale
gray stains on the plaster now, but the effect of these
freshly-rediscovered grottesche decorations was electrifying in the
early Renaissance, which was just arriving in Rome. When Pinturicchio,
Raphael and Michelangelo crawled underground and were let down shafts to
study them, carving their names on the walls to let the world know they
had been there, the paintings were a revelation of the true world of
antiquity. Beside the graffiti signatures of later tourists, like
Casanova and the Marquis de Sade scratched into a fresco inches apart,
(British Archaeology June 1999), are the autographs of Domenico
Ghirlandaio, Martin van Heemskerck, and Filippino Lippi.
Their effect on Renaissance artists was instant and profound (it can be
seen most obviously in Raphael's decoration for the loggias in the
Vatican), and the white walls, delicate swags, and bands of frieze
framed reserves containg figures or landscapes have returned at
intervals ever since, notably in late 18th century Neoclassicism, making
Fabullus one of the most influential painters in the history of art. But
discovery meant letting in moisture - and that started the slow,
inevitable process of decay. Heavy rain was blamed in the collapse of a
chunk of ceiling reported in the July/Aug 2001 issue of Archaeology.
As of 2005, it is available to visit under reservation. A curator takes
visitors along some of the (now underground) halls.
According to the current political division of the center of Rome, it is
placed in rione Monti.
From: www.wikipedia.org
|
|