The Torlonia Marbles are on display for the first time in 50 yrs & yesterday I had the chance to see them!
A masterpiece collection with an incredible history, read on for a #THREAD on the exhibition, the collection, & some of my favorites!
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#rome #archaeology @museiincomune
2/17 What’s all the fuss about? When Alessandro Torlonia dissolved the Museo Torlonia in 1976, one of the most famous collections of ancient sculpture disappeared from public view.
Now, 92 of the 620(!) sculptures from the collection are on display at the Museo Capitolini!
3/17 The collection itself has an incredible history, acquired by the Torlonia family from other Italian noble families like the Giustiniani in the early 19th century.
However, the modern history of some of these objects stretches back to the 1500s, recorded by artists in Rome!
4/17 You’ll see that many of these sculptures seem unbroken, that’s because they were heavily restored since the 16th c.—something that has thankfully gone out of fashion!
I wish that this fragmentary Herakles—the final object in the exhibition—had been at the beginning!
5/17 The statue is a mixture of original sculpture (torso), reworked ancient material (head) and 18th c. restorations (hands).
Unlike the rest of the collection, the seams are left visible, introducing viewers (with the help of a diagram) to the true nature of these objects!
6/17 Other objects, like this incredible statue of the personified Nile River expertly hide the fact that the sculpture is almost entirely restored!
Only the front of the torso is original, the head is a recarved piece of ancient stone & the rest of the sculpture is modern!
7/17 But don’t bemoan these restorations too much, they’re artistic masterpieces in themselves, sometimes by recognized masters!
Can you tell which of these copies of the Modest Venus is entirely original, and which was restored around 1620 by none other than Pietro Bernini?!
8/17 Oftentimes, these restorations are more understated, with modern busts carved to hold ancient portraits—which brings us to some of the most famous pieces in the collection!
The Old Man of Otricoli—this incredible veristic portrait of a republican patrician—is one example!
9/17 Of course, this could go in the opposite direction! My favorite piece in the exhibition is this portrait, perhaps of a Hellenistic Bactrian king.
Hints of drapery at the shoulders indicate that it was probably cut away from a complete statue for display as a bust!
10/17 Busts dominate the Torlonia Collection, and the exhibition strives to display a range of portraits—a synthetic approach that mirrors the comprehensive collection strategies of ancient and modern enthusiasts!
Here’s a selection of everyone’s favorite Romans!
11/17 The Torlonia Collection isn’t just about sculpture in the round, & some of the most famous pieces are reliefs!
You might have heard of the Portus Relief, a celebration of Roman horror vacui & a great reminder that all of these sculptures would have been brightly painted!
12/17 Another highlight of relief is this sarcophagus, intricately decorated with Herakles performing his labors!
Many of the scenes were inspired by famous ancient sculptures of the hero, even including a tiny Herakles Epitrapezios on the lid! Can you recognize the others!?
13/17 Speaking of Herakles, standing on my tiptoes near this enormous basin depicting his labors brought the biggest surprise in the exhibition!
Hidden on the interior of the Albani Vase is a huge portrait of the gorgon Medusa, a restoration following an ancient predecessor!
14/17 Let’s get back to the statues!
Small statues meant for the gardens of Roman elite villas are found throughout the exhibition, often depicting mythological scenes.
Here’s everyone’s favorite moment in the Odyssey, when our hero clings to a ram to escape the cyclops’ cave!
15/17 Maybe the most macabre mythological scene, this pair of small statues portrays Apollo holding the flayed skin of the satyr Marsyas after an ill-advised musical competition!
Heavily restored today, this pair remains spectacularly striking!
16/17 I’ll lighten the mood with this final sculpture, a wonderful little goat with an incredible story.
One of the first pieces in the Giustiniani Collection, it was clearly a family favorite: the Marquis entrusted its restoration (head) to none other than Gian Lorenzo Bernini!
17/17 Of course, all this only scratches the surface of the 92 pieces on display at the Musei Capitolini!
Plan a visit next time you’re in Rome, but don’t worry if you can’t make it: the collection is slated to go on tour soon, hopefully to a #museum near you!
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After 189 years, one thing is for certain: this statue is still BIG!
But who does this enormous sculpture depict, when was it made, where was it meant to go, & why was it abandoned in the quarry?
🧵1/8 #greece #archaeology
The Colossus of Apollonas is the largest marble sculpture from the ancient Greek world, measuring over 11.5 meters tall!
Carved out of a single block of stone, it was abandoned and left in the quarry atop this hill on the north coast of Naxos, in the Greek Cyclades.
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It's not the only abandoned colossal sculpture from Naxos, & two enormous statues are found at Melanes. Long-haired & nude, this type was popular throughout Archaic Greece.
Unlike these statues, though, the Colossus of Apollonas is clothed, bearded, & twice as tall!
Located on Melos’s rugged north coast, Phylakopi was occupied from the Early Bronze Age (2300 BCE) until the collapse of the Bronze Age 1200 years later.
Throughout, it was an important site of trade, connecting mainland Greece with Crete & the rest of the Cyclades!
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Phylakopi was an important center of trade for two main reasons: the island’s strategic location & its abundant natural resources.
Perhaps the most important was Melian obsidian, a volcanic glass that was used to make sharp tools throughout the Bronze Age Aegean & beyond!
2/ The painting was hiding in plain sight until 1983, when an archaeologist from Chios spotted a faint signature on a badly damaged icon!
Christ & the Virgin were covered in worked silver & years of smoke, varnish, scented oils, & plenty of repainting had left it barely legible!
3/ That archaeologist, Giorgos Mastoropoulos, had been on Syros to catalogue religious heirlooms brought to the island by refugees during the Greek War of Independance.
After announcing his discovery, the painting underwent conservation & began making worldwide news!
The Greek island of Sifnos is famous for its silver mines & beautiful beaches, but it's also home to one of the most important Mycenaean settlements in the Cyclades!
Let's visit Agios Andreas, the most interesting site you've never heard of!
2/ Founded in the 12th c. BCE, Agios Andreas is a large, heavily fortified settlement with a dense urban plan.
Perched on a hilltop high above Apollonia–the modern capital of Sifnos–it offers spectacular views of the entire east side of the island, & the neighboring islands!
3/ With its conspicuous fortificion walls, the site was first spotted in 1841 by J. A. Buchon, & Christos Tsountas conducted a brief excavation in 1898.
The site would remain relatively unknown until 1970, when Barbara Philippaki began a decade-long excavation at Ag. Andreas.
2/ We met up with Alexandros Mazarakis Ainian & his team from @uth_gr who have been excavating the ancient city of Kythnos since 2002.
Combining survey, excavation, & underwater archaeology, they’re doing some of the most interesting work on the Greek islands today!
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3/ The ancient city flourished from the 10th century BCE all the way until the 7th century CE, making it an incredibly long-lived site with fascinating archaeology.
Just offshore, the little island of Vryokastraki even has evidence for Early Cycladic & Mycenaean settlement!
2/ The history of Kythnos begins on this little promontory, over 10,000 years ago!
Excavations here at Maroulas have revealed one of the only Mesolithic settlements in the Aegean, some of the earliest human activity in the whole region!
3/ The dwellings, burials, ancient garbage found at Maroulas tell us that the earliest inhabitants of the island lived well on the island, eating plenty of fresh fish!
Taking a walk around the site today reveals plenty of obsidian & quartz for tool production.