Nero's pleasure palace was buried for 1500 years with many of its treasures following his downfall. This is the story of how those treasures were rediscovered by accident and how that find influences our artistic sensibilities today.
Why,one might ask, would modern civilization owe adebt of gratitude
to theunpopular, infamous Roman emperor Nero, dead two thousand years
ago byhis own hand? For those folks not tunedin to their own
historicalroots, Nero is an important part of your culture, not just a
computersoftware tool for burning compact disks. Nero gathered a
magnificentcollection of classical Greek sculpture from all over the
Roman Empire,most of which was lost following his downfall. Why should
you careabout Nero's story?--because whathappened to him influences the
way youlook at the world every day.
You may have heard the tale
of howNero fiddled while Rome burned in 64 A.D. First, let us lay that
storyto rest. Despite the hatred he engendered in the Roman populace
for hismany atrocities, there is no evidence to support this rumor. In
fact,he appears to have been rather helpful to a devastated Rome during
thatperiod. No, we cannot give him credit for the burning of Rome, but
Nerohad many other monstrous acts with which we can credit
him--usingChristians as human torches comes first to mind.
One of
Nero'schief failings was vanity. Nero considered himself to be
enormouslytalented in all things: art, drama, athletics, and, of
course, music, afiddler extraordinaire he claimed. Perhaps he was. We
are told that hewon every single competition he entered, whether
artistic orathletic,from fiddling to chariot racing and every thing in
between. Weare further told that the reason he always won was because
reallyunpleasant things happened to anyone who bested him.
Nero
madegood use of the wide-spread destruction of Rome. The emperor's
ownhouse, the Domus Transitoria, was destroyed in the fire, but free
spacewas now available in the crowded city, now burned out. Nero
tookadvantage of that space to build a pleasure palace, his Domus Aurea, or Golden House. TheDomus Aurea was not a place for sleeping, because Nero had other lodgings for that. Nero outfitted hisDomus Aurea with priceless treasures, including his collection of classical Greek sculpture.
Described by Pliny the Elder, Nero built the Domus Aureaof
bricks and stucco, lavishly embellished it with gold-leaf decorationand
ivory veneer, and he studded the ceilings with semi-previousstones. One
ceiling actuallyrotated and sprinkled perfume, crankedlaboriously by
slaves. The Domus Aurea covered350 acres, roughly a
third of Rome, spanning fourof the SevenHills of Rome in the heart of
the city. The grounds of the Domus Aurea featured villas, vineyards, forests, a sacred grove, pastures for livestock, and an artificial lake.
Nero erected a 120 foot bronze statue of himself in the center dressed as the sun god, Sol, his Colossus Neronis. The Colossus would be the sole survivor of Nero's Golden House.In
68 A.D. the Roman Senate declared Nero an enemy of the state, adeath
sentence, and the emperor committed suicide to avoid
execution.Following his death, the lake was drained, the Colosseum constructed in its place, and Nero's colossal head wasdecapitated from the colossal body of the Neronis, then replacedwith the heads of succeeding emperors. Said to be an embarrassment to the city, the Golden House was denuded of its decorations within tenyears, and subsequently buried beneath new construction within forty years.
That would seem to be the end of Nero's Golden House,but
something strange happened to bring it back to life at the end ofthe
fifteenth century. A young Roman was walking on the Aventine hillonly
to fall into a hole into a subterranean wonderland. He landed inthe Domus Aurea, buried
beneath the Baths of Trajan. There hesaw incredible frescoes, appearing
to be freshly painted as if new. Thesite of this accident drew Italian
artists from far and wide.
Raphaeland
Michelangelo visited the site, and some artists of the timeinscribed
their names into the walls. From the depths of Nero'spleasure palace,
from the frescoes, mosaics, and sculpture, they tookinspiration, an
inspiration that would be reflected in the art of theHigh Renaissance.
As the Domus Aurea with its new antiquesource material was
explored, one classical Greek sculpture wasunearthed on a day that
Michelangelo happened to visit. It was the Laocoon, a marble work by famed Greek Hellenistic sculptors, Athanadoros, Hagesandros, and Polydoros of Rhodes.
Laocoon,a
mythological subject, depicts the Trojan priest Laocoon with his
twosons in a struggle against a giant sea snake, a punishment from
thegods for warning the Trojans about the Trojan horse. Its
powerfulemotional content and vigorous muscularity would soon be
reflected inthe works of Renaissance giants Michelangelo and Raphael.
This work andothers like it from Nero's private collection of classical
Greeksculpture profoundly influenced Italian Renaissance art, and it is
fromthis art tha{1}t we have developed our own modern
aestheticsensibilities.
Had Nero not been the demented,
despotic monsterthat he was, had his Golden House not been entombed,
buried beneath theBaths of Trajan for two millennia,his classical Greek
sculpturecollection might have been lost like so many other significant
artworks of its kind. Without Nero, we might not appreciate beauty when
wesee it.
| About the author |
Brenda Harness, art historian and former university lecturer writes about a variety of topics pertaining to art and art history. Visit her here: Fine Art Touch
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