The Marbles of the Roman Villa of Chiragan at Martres-Tolosane (Gallia Narbonensis)
Capitolo di libro
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
100 marble artefacts originating from the Roman villa of Chiragan and now part of the
collections of the Musée Saint-Raymond at Toulouse were analysed and include the
Herakles reliefs, the mythological tondos, a series of small-scale ideal sculptures and the
collection of private and imperial portraits present in the villa. The local marble of St Béat
quarried on the Pyrenees was used for the Herakles reliefs, the tondos, and the coeval
portraits of the owner of Chiragan and his family, all sculptures stylistically identified as
works of Aphrodisian sculptors dated to the end of the 3rd century A.D. by Jean-Charles
Balty or to the mid second half of the 4th century A.D. by Marianne Bergmann. Import
marbles, mostly Asiatic from Göktepe and Iscehisar (Docimium), were used for nine smallscale
artefacts probably imported as finished products. Quite unexpected is the pervasive
use of the marble of Göktepe for portraits of the Roman imperial period that were mostly
imported from Rome as finished products. 59 sculptures from Chiragan and 11 portraits
discovered at Béziers in the 19th century were analysed (Göktepe 37, Paros 17, Docimium 5,
St Béat 5, Carrara 6). Between the end of the 1st and the beginning of the 2nd century A.D.
the marble of Göktepe rapidly replaced Parian lychnites as the sculptural marble of choice
for high quality portraits. In late antiquity, marble use and workmanship at Chiragan were
deeply affected by the wish to emulate urban models, but also met with the difficulty of
importing foreign marbles to a region not easily reachable from the Mediterranean.
Tipologia CRIS:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Marble
Elenco autori:
Attanasio, Donato
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