Fragment of a Mosaic with the Image of two Theatrical Masks.

Roman Empire, 2nd - 3rd century AD.

MATERIAL: Marble tiles.

SIZE: Width 100 cm, height 47 cm. Frame: width 110 cm, height 59 cm.

PROVENANCE:
- Private collection, Malibu, California, USA, acquired before 1980.
- New York art market until 2023.

CONDITION: Good condition, mounting on modern support.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- DUNBABIN, K. Mosaics of the Greek and Roman world. Cambridge University Press. 1999.
- ÖNAL, M. Zeugma Mosaics. A Turizm Yayinlari. 2009.

PARALLELS:

Fig. 1 Mosaic with female figure, House of the Boat of Psyches. Antioch of the Orontes, Turkey, h. 200-225 AD, opus tessellatum. Musée du Louvre, Paris, inv. MND 1951, MA 3460.

Fig. 2 Mosaic with theatrical mask, House of the Faun. Pompeii, s. II BC, opus vermiculatum. Archaeological Museum Nazionale di Napoli (Italy), inv. 9994.

DESCRIPTION:

Fragment of Roman mosaic made following the opus tessellatum technique, with cubic marble tesserae that cover a wide chromatic range, allowing the flat areas of color to be combined with the light modeling of the faces, based on tonal gradations. This search for three-dimensionality in figurative motifs is typical of the Roman imperial mosaic (fig. 1), unlike the more symbolic and two-dimensional representation of the Byzantine period, where illusionistic modeling was preferably reserved for secondary plant, animal or architectural elements. .

The main motif is two theatrical masks, one male and one female, represented facing the viewer on a floor plane, accompanied by a staff decorated with ribbons and an oval object, perhaps a cushion or an inverted container. This design is framed by bands of flat color in black, white and ocher tones. In the central representation the palette is expanded, using different shades of white, red, yellow and brown to model the faces of the masks and other details, seeking a certain three-dimensional effect.

Theater masks are a common ornamental element in Rome, generally in relation to the Dionysian world and the values associated with it, ideas of a happy, pleasant, beautiful and joyful existence. They were therefore favorable elements for decorating the private sphere, which is why they will be found mainly in the gardens of Roman houses and villas as ornamental elements related to the celebration of life.

Usually, the representation of the theatrical mask in mosaic or fresco painting reproduces the real object used on stage, with the mouth open so that the actor's voice is projected (fig. 2). In this case, however, these are symbolic representations that do not seem to reproduce specific models of canonical theater characters, but directly the archetypes that they represent. The male mask is bearded, with a serene expression, and possibly represents the paterfamilias , the leader of the family and the house. At his side, the female character with a stern face and frown would represent his wife, the matron responsible for the proper functioning and harmony of the home.

The art of mosaic comes to Rome from Greece, and will soon constitute an entire industry, reaching levels of quality never seen before. Its diffusion was such that it became the main form of ornamentation of any Roman villa or house. In Rome, mosaics were built from small pieces called tesserae (hence the name opus tessellatum ), cubic-shaped pieces of calcareous rocks, glass or ceramic, of different sizes. These tiles were arranged on the surface to be decorated like a puzzle, distributing the color and shape according to the design, and were fixed with cement. A second technique, called opus vermiculatum , used tiles of different shapes, which adapt to the design.

At first, when the art of mosaic began to develop in Rome, it was used mainly to decorate ceilings or walls and rarely the floors, because it was feared that it would not offer sufficient resistance to footsteps. Once the technique was perfected, however, the necessary solidity was achieved to be able to apply it to floors, which favored the spread throughout the Empire of its use for the production of luxury flooring.

The growing importance of the mosaic industry is reflected in imperial regulations such as those carried out by Diocletian in the 3rd century, which established very precise price ranges, or by the facilities granted by Constantine to the Mosaists when he moved the capital of the Empire to Byzantium in the year 330, facilitating the exodus of Greek and Roman masters to the new capital and thus laying the foundations of the famous Byzantine mosaic.



Notes:

- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union) - If the piece is destined outside the European Union a substitution of the export permit should be requested, can take between 1-2 weeks maximum.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.
#ExclusiveCabinetofCuriosities

Povestea Vânzătorului

Galeria de Artă Antică - Arheologie cu sediul în Barcelona, cu peste cincisprezece ani de experiență. Specializată în artă clasică, artă egipteană, artă asiatică și artă precolumbiană. Acesta garantează autenticitatea tuturor pieselor sale. Participă la cele mai importante târguri de artă din Spania, precum Feriarte, precum și la târguri din străinătate, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Toate piesele sunt trimise cu un permis de export eliberat de Ministerul Culturii din Spania. Livrăm rapid prin DHL Express sau Direct Art Transport.
Tradus cu Google

Fragment of a Mosaic with the Image of two Theatrical Masks.

Roman Empire, 2nd - 3rd century AD.

MATERIAL: Marble tiles.

SIZE: Width 100 cm, height 47 cm. Frame: width 110 cm, height 59 cm.

PROVENANCE:
- Private collection, Malibu, California, USA, acquired before 1980.
- New York art market until 2023.

CONDITION: Good condition, mounting on modern support.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- DUNBABIN, K. Mosaics of the Greek and Roman world. Cambridge University Press. 1999.
- ÖNAL, M. Zeugma Mosaics. A Turizm Yayinlari. 2009.

PARALLELS:

Fig. 1 Mosaic with female figure, House of the Boat of Psyches. Antioch of the Orontes, Turkey, h. 200-225 AD, opus tessellatum. Musée du Louvre, Paris, inv. MND 1951, MA 3460.

Fig. 2 Mosaic with theatrical mask, House of the Faun. Pompeii, s. II BC, opus vermiculatum. Archaeological Museum Nazionale di Napoli (Italy), inv. 9994.

DESCRIPTION:

Fragment of Roman mosaic made following the opus tessellatum technique, with cubic marble tesserae that cover a wide chromatic range, allowing the flat areas of color to be combined with the light modeling of the faces, based on tonal gradations. This search for three-dimensionality in figurative motifs is typical of the Roman imperial mosaic (fig. 1), unlike the more symbolic and two-dimensional representation of the Byzantine period, where illusionistic modeling was preferably reserved for secondary plant, animal or architectural elements. .

The main motif is two theatrical masks, one male and one female, represented facing the viewer on a floor plane, accompanied by a staff decorated with ribbons and an oval object, perhaps a cushion or an inverted container. This design is framed by bands of flat color in black, white and ocher tones. In the central representation the palette is expanded, using different shades of white, red, yellow and brown to model the faces of the masks and other details, seeking a certain three-dimensional effect.

Theater masks are a common ornamental element in Rome, generally in relation to the Dionysian world and the values associated with it, ideas of a happy, pleasant, beautiful and joyful existence. They were therefore favorable elements for decorating the private sphere, which is why they will be found mainly in the gardens of Roman houses and villas as ornamental elements related to the celebration of life.

Usually, the representation of the theatrical mask in mosaic or fresco painting reproduces the real object used on stage, with the mouth open so that the actor's voice is projected (fig. 2). In this case, however, these are symbolic representations that do not seem to reproduce specific models of canonical theater characters, but directly the archetypes that they represent. The male mask is bearded, with a serene expression, and possibly represents the paterfamilias , the leader of the family and the house. At his side, the female character with a stern face and frown would represent his wife, the matron responsible for the proper functioning and harmony of the home.

The art of mosaic comes to Rome from Greece, and will soon constitute an entire industry, reaching levels of quality never seen before. Its diffusion was such that it became the main form of ornamentation of any Roman villa or house. In Rome, mosaics were built from small pieces called tesserae (hence the name opus tessellatum ), cubic-shaped pieces of calcareous rocks, glass or ceramic, of different sizes. These tiles were arranged on the surface to be decorated like a puzzle, distributing the color and shape according to the design, and were fixed with cement. A second technique, called opus vermiculatum , used tiles of different shapes, which adapt to the design.

At first, when the art of mosaic began to develop in Rome, it was used mainly to decorate ceilings or walls and rarely the floors, because it was feared that it would not offer sufficient resistance to footsteps. Once the technique was perfected, however, the necessary solidity was achieved to be able to apply it to floors, which favored the spread throughout the Empire of its use for the production of luxury flooring.

The growing importance of the mosaic industry is reflected in imperial regulations such as those carried out by Diocletian in the 3rd century, which established very precise price ranges, or by the facilities granted by Constantine to the Mosaists when he moved the capital of the Empire to Byzantium in the year 330, facilitating the exodus of Greek and Roman masters to the new capital and thus laying the foundations of the famous Byzantine mosaic.



Notes:

- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union) - If the piece is destined outside the European Union a substitution of the export permit should be requested, can take between 1-2 weeks maximum.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.
#ExclusiveCabinetofCuriosities

Povestea Vânzătorului

Galeria de Artă Antică - Arheologie cu sediul în Barcelona, cu peste cincisprezece ani de experiență. Specializată în artă clasică, artă egipteană, artă asiatică și artă precolumbiană. Acesta garantează autenticitatea tuturor pieselor sale. Participă la cele mai importante târguri de artă din Spania, precum Feriarte, precum și la târguri din străinătate, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Toate piesele sunt trimise cu un permis de export eliberat de Ministerul Culturii din Spania. Livrăm rapid prin DHL Express sau Direct Art Transport.
Tradus cu Google
Cultură
Epoca Romanilor
Name of object
Fragment de mozaic cu imaginea a două măști de teatru. secolele al II-lea - al III-lea d.Hr. Latime
Secol/ Interval de timp
2nd-3rd century AD
Proveniență
Colecție privată
Țară
Necunoscut
Stare
Bună

2340 de review-uri (836 în ultimele 12 luni)
  1. 825
  2. 10
  3. 1

Great object. Really beautiful. Quick delivery. Excellent.

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user-9567dceff0be

Superbe objet, Service d'Arqueologia Ancient Art excellent et rapide. Jaume Bagot toujours parfait .

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Domidogan

Thank you for this Oinochoe, one question: did you as promised read my post!

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robarbouw

tres bel objet je le recherchai depuis longtemps envoi rapide et protégé je pense qu'il y aura d'autres achats avec ce vendeur merci +++++++

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user-78de74aee092

top oggetto bellissimo grazie 💯💯💯💯💯💯 :-)

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user-a1739a8e7293

I bought this beautiful artifact together with artifact from Mr. Bagot but although it is clearly stated on his shipping page that when purchasing multiple artifacts i paid the double package costs

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robarbouw

I bought this beautiful artifact together with artifact from Mr. Bagot but although it is clearly stated on his shipping page that when purchasing multiple artifacts i paid the double package costs

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robarbouw

J Bagot es un profesional excelente. Sus artículos son de gran calidad, se incluye la documentación necesaria y el embalaje se realiza con esmero. Le recomiendo encarecidamente.

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user-3268607d7894
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2340 de review-uri (836 în ultimele 12 luni)
  1. 825
  2. 10
  3. 1

Declinarea responsabilității

Vânzătorul garantează și poate dovedi că obiectul a fost obținut în mod legal. Vânzătorul a fost informat de către Catawiki că trebuie să furnizeze documentația cerută de legile și reglementările din țara de reședință. Vânzătorul garantează și are dreptul de a vinde/exporta acest obiect. Vânzătorul va furniza cumpărătorului toate informațiile disponibile cu privire la proveniența obiectului. Vânzătorul se asigură că toate autorizațiile necesare sunt/vor fi puse la punct. Vânzătorul va informa imediat cumpărătorul cu privire la eventualele întârzieri în obținerea unor astfel de autorizații.

Vânzătorul garantează și poate dovedi că obiectul a fost obținut în mod legal. Vânzătorul a fost informat de către Catawiki că trebuie să furnizeze documentația cerută de legile și reglementările din țara de reședință. Vânzătorul garantează și are dreptul de a vinde/exporta acest obiect. Vânzătorul va furniza cumpărătorului toate informațiile disponibile cu privire la proveniența obiectului. Vânzătorul se asigură că toate autorizațiile necesare sunt/vor fi puse la punct. Vânzătorul va informa imediat cumpărătorul cu privire la eventualele întârzieri în obținerea unor astfel de autorizații.