READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CAH.VOL.XIITHE IMPERIAL CRISIS AND RECOVERY. A.D. 193-324CHAPTER XVITHE TRANSITION TO LATE-CLASSICAL ARTI.
FROM SEPTIMIUS SEVERUS TO ELAGABALUS
THE history of art between the accession of
Septimius Severus and the foundation of Constantinople does not appear as a
continuous chain made up of separate links, like that which ran from the
classicism of the Augustan age to the revival of the Flavian style in the late
Antonine era. In this later period, as in the earlier, West and East, despite
all parallelism and interaction, preserved their own aspect. But the balance
between the art techniques of the Greek East and the Roman-Celtic West
disappears once more. Stylistic fashions tend towards extremes and provoke more
hasty and violent reactions. Varying currents flow side by side or cross and
mingle. In the gradual dying fall of classical antique art fresh themes may be
heard which introduce the late-classical and are the prelude of medieval art.
The confusion of political events and of economic conditions is mirrored to
some extent in the art of the day, though this art in other respects follows
its own natural law. In one particular the history of art shares the fate of
contemporary political history: for the middle part of this period the
tradition is more broken than in the earlier and later parts. It is a period
arbitrarily bounded by political events, but for the historian of art its
opening and closing years mark no epoch: rather they are organically linked
with what was past and what was to come.
The three first decades, including the reigns of
Severus, Caracalla, and Elagabalus, embrace both the zenith and the decline of
that nervous, excitable style which had matured in the late Antonine age. A
change of style, already foreshadowed under Antoninus Pius, had taken place in
the seventies of the second century when the Roman sentiment, driven
underground by Hadrianic classicism, came to the
surface anew. This was a renaissance of the Flavian style in the strong
expressiveness of which we recognize the first indications of the
‘late-classical.’ The column of Marcus Aurelius only reached completion during
the reign of Septimius Severus.
This emperor’s portrait consciously and of
deliberate purpose carries on the tradition of typical Antonine Imperial
portraiture. It does not present the military usurper with African
blood in his veins, but rather the son, fictitious though the adoption was, of
Marcus Aurelius and brother of Commodus. We can, indeed, recognize individual
traits, but they are subordinated to the traditional impression, which is
apparent not only in the almost identical cut of beard and hair, but also in
the air of calm, in the philosophic clearness of expression and in the
character of the outlines. Private portrait busts doubtless followed the
fashions of the court. Provincial variants of the Imperial portraiture appear
on the Arch of Leptis, and in a head from Ephesus. Thus in Asia Minor a
contemporary sculptor produced the head of a priest of the imperial cult,
perhaps the Sophist Flavius Damianus of Ephesus,
which has a force and expressiveness that heralds the style of a much later
period, that of the fifth century.
A real break with the past in the presentation of
the imperial portrait first becomes apparent with Caracalla, but
this again is due to his personality. He wished to figure not as the
philosopher regnant, but as the simple soldier. If, despite the complete change
of style, portraits of Commodus and Severus retained some traces of Hadrianic and Hellenic elements, those of Caracalla, with
their harsh and violent turn of the head and their emphasis on ugly and
plebeian features, seem to stress anew a feeling that is Roman. One might
regard the portrait of Caracalla either as the latest example of the Antonine
style, or as the precursor of the ‘impressionist’ portraiture that the
following period was to produce. Actually it stands between the two, separating
them by an isolated and individual style, the peculiar character of which is
not yet fully appreciated. The wealth of locks that framed the features of
Marcus Aurelius and his successors was represented as a mass pictorially
resolved into light and shade by deep-drilled hollows. But with the portrait of
Severus Alexander there appears a totally different style, in which the smooth
covering of close-fitting hair is only relieved by short chisel-marks. With
Caracalla and his cousin Elagabalus came first a change of fashion. Caracalla’s
crisp curls are shorter than his father’s: Elagabalus has lanky
hair. But what is more important is that the shape and definition of the
distinctive plastic forms of hair and beard now come to their own once more.
There were two utterly different ‘pictorial’ styles: one of the late Antonine
age, the other of the period between Severus Alexander and Gallienus. These styles were separated by a short
intermediate phase more plastic than either of them.
Was there also in the field of
statuary a movement similar to this temporary revival of sensitiveness to
plastic form? The theory has been advanced that by the beginning of the third
century the production of copies of statues, other than portrait statues, had
already ceased. But the wealth of sculptural decoration found, not only in the
Baths of Caracalla, but also within the hall of the Palaestra attached to the eastern Thermae at Ephesus, suggest rather that interest in
sculpture was still very much alive. It is improbable that this interest was
merely satisfied by the re-installation of older works of art in new buildings.
The colossal sculptures from the Baths of Caracalla like the Farnese Hercules
and the group of the Farnese Bull, are presumably products of this latest
efflorescence of plastic art. It is only in the subsequent period that we meet
with clear indications of the decline of plastic sensibility.
Roman historical reliefs could
be traced back through a long period of development to two forms differing
widely the one from the other. The one was the political and symbolical relief
of monumental character, the style of which, despite all variations of;
details, had always been fundamentally classical. The other was the popular art
of historical narrative, the real medium for which was painting but which had
experienced a translation into a plastic medium on the sculptured bands of the
columns of Trajan and Marcus Aurelius. On the arches of Titus in Rome and of
Trajan at Beneventum such popular subjects were
relegated to the narrow friezes. But it can hardly be mere accident that on the
Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus the monumental reliefs of classical type
were replaced by popular descriptive carvings displayed on wide surfaces. There
is little doubt that these carvings are based on the paintings which Severus
after his Parthian campaign caused to be exhibited in Rome even before his
return. The division into several superimposed registers, the hard but lively
characterization of personages, the composition of the scene in which the imperator harangues his troops—all these are in the tradition of the reliefs on the
column of Marcus Aurelius, even though it is improbable that the same hands
were at work on both monuments. That Senate and People in setting up the arch
should give the dominant position to these military scenes is clear evidence of
the changed political conditions since the day when the Arch of Beneventum was built. On the Severan arch there was only room on the column-bases for reliefs of the high classical
style. Here there are groups of prisoners whose bearing and movements, flow of
draperies, and carefully observed facial characteristics show that these
figures are masterpieces which have not as yet received the appreciation they
deserve either in text or picture. Great art and popular art are here to be
seen side by side no less than in later times reliefs of different periods on
the Arch of Constantine. The popular art has something of the untamed quality
but also of the strength of the barbarian. One might almost call it a
provincial art within Rome itself.
Both these types of art had still a future before
them: the large reliefs in the related art of third-century sarcophagi; popular
art in the pagan and Christian reliefs of the fourth century. The appearance of
contemporary historical reliefs of the higher style is known from an example
preserved in the Court of the Palazzo Sacchetti,
which depicts a seated emperor making proclamations to the people against an
architectural background. It has the lively excitement of the late Antonine
style at its height, and can hardly be later than the time of Septimius
Severus. In contrast with the reliefs of Marcus Aurelius on the attica of the Arch of Constantine there is here not
only an increased restlessness filling the whole scene, but it even seems as
though some elements of the popular style had invaded the theme.
It was in 203 that the Triumphal Arch was set up
in the Roman Forum; and at about the same time in Septimius’ birthplace, Leptis
Magna, there was built and dedicated on the occasion of his visit to his
African home the Tetrapylon, almost overloaded with reliefs, which is one of
the finest discoveries of the Italian excavators. A whole series of crowded
scenes have been put together, depicting battles, cavalry in procession, and,
above all, detailed representations of sacrifices, proclamations, and a
triumphal procession. Comparison with the contemporary reliefs in Rome produces
a problem which is interesting, controversial and as yet not capable of final
solution. The differences between the two are so great that if one were
ignorant of the historical context one would certainly assign different dates
to the two monuments. It is not merely a matter of the translation of Imperial
Roman prototypes into a provincial style. Provincial styles may, in certain
manifestations of the Primitive, precede the styles of the more cultured lands
on the road to the ‘late-classical’ because, in the latter, development is
arrested by the classical tradition. But here the whole artistic conception is
something wholly different. The representative element outweighs the narrative
to a far greater extent than on the column of Marcus Aurelius or on the Arch of
Severus at Rome. Figures are forcibly twisted out of the plane of their action
into a rigid frontality. The composition is here much closer to that of the
late-classical period than it is on contemporary monuments in Rome.
There was no indigenous tradition of relief-carving
in Tripoli. Are then the Leptis reliefs examples of the Italic-West Roman
style freed from the constraint of classicism; or are they influenced by the
East, where Parthian painting had already achieved a like solution of its
problems? Formerly critics were too readily disposed to derive from the East
all non-classical traits in Roman art. But in the past fifteen years we have
come to see that numerous late-classical manifestations—expressionism, central
composition and frontality—had roots of their own in Italian soil. Their growth
was checked by the influence of classical Greek forms, but every now and again
it came through. Nevertheless the reaction towards this view sometimes goes too
far. In a given period parallelism of feeling also induces a readiness to
welcome alien artistic stimuli. It is scarcely probable that Italic taste
should have found a better scope for self-expression on the soil of Africa than
in the popular art of Rome itself. On the other hand, it is very possible that
the influence of Parthian painting should have passed, through the intermediary
of some place like Doura, to North Africa. The fresco of the Tribune in Doura
which was painted at about the same time, or possibly rather earlier, supplies
the closest parallel to the composition of the reliefs at Leptis. The stimulus
may well have been brought direct by the Court of Septimius Severus and Julia Domna when they arrived from the East. It is to be noted,
too, that contemporary art in Asia Minor about the turn of the century bears
marked traces of the influence of Parthian hunting pictures.
The series of known historical reliefs breaks off
with the two great Arches of Severus, beside which must be mentioned the
artistically insignificant Arch of the Silversmiths erected in 204. It only
revives again at the beginning of the fourth century. Consequently we now lose
the sure guidance of that thread which leads from the reliefs of the Ara Pacis through all the changes of styles up to the Arch of
Septimius Severus. Did the production of historical reliefs really cease for a
whole century, or are we merely misled by the lack of surviving monuments? It
is, indeed, hard to believe that this proud tradition of official art should
have been quite extinguished. On the other hand, it would certainly appear that
third-century sarcophagi, by contrast with those of the second century,
acquired a heightened importance as works of art, and that they to a certain
extent took the place of historical reliefs. Once the evolution of the
sarcophagus has been adequately studied, it may be that this form of art,
together with portraiture, will provide the guiding clue for the history of art
in the third century.
On the sarcophagi it is possible not only to observe
the gradual change of style, but also the vanishing of older themes and the
appearance of fresh ones. A good example of a traditional type reshaped to the
sentiment of a new taste is supplied by the Taverna bridal-sarcophagus, the
scenes on which are full of heightened intensity of feeling and of a lively
restlessness permeating every detail. The figures are close-pressed, the
gestures are more emotional. In shape the sarcophagus has grown in height.
A predominant subject on sarcophagi of the time of
Septimius Severus is the battle-picture. An earlier generation had employed the
Hellenistic motives of the fights between Greeks and Gauls; but now, under the
influence of the reliefs that commemorated the victorious campaigns of Marcus
Aurelius, a very different type of presentation depicting a contemporary battle
appears, and it borrows no more than a few of the older motives. The earliest
and most remarkable of these works is in the Terme Museum, a sarcophagus from
the Via Appia probably made in the last years of
Commodus or the first of Septimius Severus. Framed between groups of captives
and underneath the trophy there is set a crowded, pictorial and stirring
battle-scene, in which the barbarians collapse under the victorious onset of
the Romans. Even though isolated fugitives or foes trying to ward off attack
appear in the upper rows, yet the composition as a whole is partitioned into an
upper world of the victors and a lower world of the vanquished.
A series of sarcophagi similar to this were made in
the following decades. At the end of the period under discussion a new theme
appeared which was destined to be more or less the predominant subject in the
next period, the lion-hunt. Up to this time, the Roman passion for the hunt—Romana milities—had
been shown on sarcophagi in mythological guise by the hunters Hippolytus,
Meleager, or Adonis, and these older themes were continued. But now there is a
new creation in the composition of the lion-hunt which is perhaps dependent on
the prototype of some Imperial monument, perhaps even the sarcophagus of
Caracalla, who himself, as a new Alexander, ‘contra leonem stetit.’ A noble, clear composition appears on a
sarcophagus in the Palazzo Mattei in Rome with a few
figures of large size which occupy the whole available space with their
movements. Though the technique of the drill, common in the Severan period for working hair and mane, is still employed, yet we note in the
treatment of the nude, in drapery, and in locks of hair clearly divided from
one another a thorough tightening-up of plastic form. Here it is evident that
the same change is in progress as that already observed in the portraits of
Caracalla and of Elagabalus. The head of the effigy on the sarcophagus is still
under the influence of Caracalla’s Imperial portraiture, and thus this relief
may have been carved about 220. It marks the turning-point towards a fresh
development.
With the opening of the third century there
begins the continuous evolution of painting in the Christian catacombs of
Rome. This starts, as we should expect, with a pictorial style that corresponds
to that of late Antonine and Severan reliefs. The
earliest paintings are in the Lucina vault, the decorative scheme of which,
having a certain architectural solidity, still holds a memory of the early
Antonine style. After these a gradual loosening and deterioration is
perceptible. The illusionistic manner seems to increase, but to be broken by
reactions. As a rule the artistic quality of these paintings is rather low.
Those in the vault of the Aurelii, probably still of
the Severan style, are, however, more important. Here
there are, besides landscapes and paintings with small figure subjects, some
almost monumental figures, each over three feet high, of eleven apostles or
prophets. During Caracalla’s reign there was probably a break in purely
illusionistic art in painting as well as in sculpture. Perhaps we possess a
mere fragment of this intermediate phase in a small piece of fresco in the
Baths of Caracalla which preserves a delicately and cleanly modelled head.
In architecture, as in the
other arts, the first decades of the third century show a belated flowering
after the wealth of the Hadrianic and Antonine
periods. The impoverishment of the provinces and the consequences of social
upheavals only began to take effect gradually and in varying degrees in the
several provinces. In Greece proper no building of importance appears to have
been erected. The workshops of Athens were kept going by the manufacture of
copies of statues and of sarcophagi for export. The flourishing life of Asia
Minor was hit more violently by the ravages of the wars and their consequences.
But in Ephesus in the reign of Severus there was still the wealthy sophist,
Flavius Damianus, who could afford to build a large
hall and to erect the new Palaestra of the Eastern
Gymnasium and fill it with costly sculptures. Moreover, the Baths by the harbour carried on the Ephesian style of the gymnasium.
After this period, however, building activity in Asia Minor almost ceased until
the end of the century.
It is intelligible that in the provinces of Syria
and Africa, which had suffered little from the wars, the zeal for building
should continue from the second century. In Syria this period witnessed the new
buildings of the temple of Juppiter Damascenus and the completion of the Propylaea at
Heliopolis (Baalbek). This kind of activity was still greater in Africa, the
province that was most closely bound to the dynasty. There is only need to
mention the Capitolium (a.d. 208) and the Arch of Severus at Lambaesis, the temple of Minerva at Tebessa,
and the triumphal arches set up for Caracalla, one at Tebessa in 214, the other at Djemila. But as in Ephesus, so
in Syria and Africa, there is an absence of all architectural novelty. Old
plans are completed; new buildings are erected on traditional lines.
Rome itself, however, became the stage for an
architectural achievement that marked a mighty advance on the work of the
preceding epoch. In the year 191a fire ravaged the city. Septimius Severus and
Julia Domna did much to repair the damage. The
Porticus Octavia, the temple of Vesta and the House of the Vestals were
reconstructed, and the Pantheon was repaired. Severus built additions to the
imperial palace on the Palatine including a new wing. And on the south-west
slope of the Palatine looking towards the Via Appia he constructed the many-storeyed State building
called the Septizonium, the columnar style of which
may owe something to suggestions from Asia Minor. In the Forum Romanum there still stands the huge and impressive
triumphal arch put up in the year 203 for the Emperor and his sons.
It is not always that we can, without forcing the evidence, draw stylistic
parallels between architectural compositions and the arts of sculpture and
painting. But the Arch of Severus does fit perfectly into the picture of the
style of the late Antonine period.
In contrast to the classical lines
and plastic simplicity of the much smaller Arch of Titus its architecture seems
full of harshness and discord, and dependent on the picturesque contrasts of
light and shade. A remarkable architect has here exercised his commanding power
to derive new effects from old motives.
Caracalla’s temple of Sarapis and the Sun-temple built by Elagabalus are entirely, or almost entirely,
destroyed. But the Baths of Caracalla, which were only completed by his
successors, have survived as one of the mightiest ruins in the world. Their
impressiveness has, incidentally, led to an overestimate of the achievement of
the age. In actual fact they reproduce in all essentials the ground-plan and
elevation of their classical prototype, the Baths of Trajan. The plan is
distinguished by an almost ornamental scheme. The extent to which the
wall-decorations may have supplied novelty, when contrasted with those of the
older Baths, can no longer be known. There seem to have been some new and
notable additions in the construction of ceilings and of the dome of the calidarium.
If we survey the portraiture, relief-sculpture,
painting and architecture of this period, we get, in spite of certain
contradictions and ups and downs, a consistent picture of a style, already moulded in previous decades, pursuing its course and moving
to its conclusion. There is, then, a late Antonine-Severan style occupying roughly the half-century from a.d. 170 to 220.
II.
FROM SEVERUS ALEXANDER TO THE
ACCESSION OF DIOCLETIAN
Throughout the period of the crisis and
disintegration of the Empire, there can be traced, if only in general outlines,
a continuity of stylistic development. The City of Rome has a more central
significance in the history of art in this period than in political history. In
art the Roman national character had achieved a strength and activity which
enabled it to assimilate to itself the foreign element that entered it, and to
carry on a specifically Roman tradition into late-classical art.
Not more than six or eight years separate the
portraits of Elagabalus from those of Severus Alexander. A comparison of the
likenesses of these two cousins reveals a complete change in the fashion of
portraiture which dominates the decades that follow. It is marked most strongly
by the technical representation of the hair. The impression made by an Antonine
portrait depended primarily on the contrast between the shape of the face and
the luxuriant mass of waving locks. The portrait of Elagabalus still had
strands of hair plastically rounded and clearly distinguished. But now the hair
flattens down into a cap barely separated from the face, only distinguished
from it by its smoothness and colour. The firm
plastic modelling of the features gives place to a soft modulation of the
surface. We can trace a development of this style of portraiture from Maximinus and Gordian III to Philip the Arabian. The slight
plastic shaping of the hair that had at first been retained gradually
disappears completely. The skull-cap of hair is broken by chisel-marks which at
first follow the lines of the locks, though presently these too vanish. There
is an attempt to recapture, in the manner of the ancient Roman traditional
portrait, the momentary and personal element by holding and emphasizing
characteristic forms, and there is success in expressing both the precocity in
the features of the youthful Gordian and the barbarism in Maximinus and Philip. In classical art also impressionism and expressionism are but
little apart. About the middle of the century the portrait of Decius shows
certain stylized mannerisms which would have led straight on to the portrait of
Probus and ‘late-classical’ art, but for the .fact that this tendency was
thrust aside for several decades by a powerful reaction. But before we consider
this we must glance at some of the surviving monuments of the first thirty
years of this period.
The changes in coiffure and portraiture certainly
represent a reaction against the Antonine and Severan concepts of a portrait, and in particular a reaction of the Roman spirit
against the Hadrianic Hellenic traditions employed
for the likenesses of the Antonine Emperors. The more homely and human
character of the new style, which renounced all display of pomp, has
occasionally led to the belief that this restrained art replaced the baroque
art of the Severan age. But we should form an
entirely false picture of our period were we to base our conclusions on
portraiture alone.
Between about 225 and 230, judging from the
portrait head upon it, the great Ludovisi battle-sarcophagus was made. To this work the term baroque can be applied with
more justification than to any other ancient work of art, though admittedly it
is a style by no means identical with the baroque of more modern art. But it is
at the same time a work in which there appear the complexity and the twofold
tendencies of the day. As far as its artistic significance goes, it is a work of the first rank presenting the highest
achievement of the time. When it is compared with the battle sarcophagus from
the Via Appia made a generation earlier a remarkable
contrast is apparent. The composition taken over from the other has been
clothed in entirely new forms. The first general impression of a baroque effect
is produced by the larger size of sarcophagus and figures, by their close
compression, and by the emotional expression that reaches in the faces of the
mortally wounded an intensity surpassing anything previous in ancient art, for
it recalls the work of the medieval and the baroque sculptor. But in contrast
to the baroque this relief is kept firmly within the bounds of its frame and
its front plane. The plastic sharpness of each single shape carries on the
development of the art which we first met on the Mattei sarcophagus with the lionhunt. But, though this
plastic treatment is still purely classical, we seem to perceive in the pose
and movement of each figure a certain lack of sure feeling for the organic
growth and rhythm of the whole which attests a falling off in plastic
sensibility.
The real difference between the battle-sarcophagi
and their predecessors lies in composition. The number of figures is now small.
Their relation to space and depth is altered. On both these sarcophagi the
balance of the composition has been planned down to the smallest detail. But
while on the older example groups are combined, figures recede in depth, and
leave room between one another, there appears on the Ludovisi sarcophagus a whole crowd of figures filling the plane out evenly, for the
figures that are behind stand out in the same relief as those in front or bend
forward their heads to the front plane of the picture. Thus we get, despite the
plasticity of the single figures, that carpet-like effect which A. Riegl has brought out in his analysis of a contemporary
sarcophagus with Amazons. Indeed, this effect must have been intensified when
the gilding on the men’s hair and horses’ manes was visible. Emotion and
rigidity are here combined in peculiar guise. The composition and construction
of the design mark a definite step in the direction of the late-classical,
while the modelling of individual figures harks back to classical art. In the
intellectual conception of victory the sarcophagus also parts company with its
prototype and tends towards the late-classical. The victorious general is no
longer fighting but triumphant, and turns from the turmoil of battle towards
the spectator, claiming worship. The subsidiary figures are noticeably smaller
in size, an anticipation of the later practice of representing personages in
sizes that correspond to their relative importance.
The emotional temperament of the age showed a
preference for hunting-scenes or fighting Amazons, and instilled an intense
restlessness into other subjects like representations of the Thiasos or of sea-pieces. Quiet, simple portrait-busts are
set in the midst of these reliefs on the sarcophagi to form a strange but quite
intentional contrast with the movement, the very wildness of the reliefs. On
the hunt-sarcophagi may be seen how the treatment of hair and garments became
more full of movement between 230 and 250. Locks of hair wind about like snakes
and end by looking like flickering flames. Just before the mid-century they
again lose their plastic definition and become more pictorial. Facial
expression grows even more exaggerated. The climax of this ‘baroque’
development is reached in works like the so-called sarcophagus of Balbinus in Copenhagen which must be dated to about a.d. 250.
Was this baroque-like tendency confined to Rome,
or did it also permeate the rest of the ancient world? We can recognize its
presence on Attic sarcophagi in the evolution of what are misnamed
Graeco-Roman examples. On one remarkable piece, the Achilles-sarcophagus of the
Capitoline Museum (c. 240 to 245), we encounter this baroque style with
its wealth of tightly packed figures. Riegl recognized in this relief-work the true parallel to the sarcophagi made in the
Capital. But neither the violence of emotional expression nor the loosening of
the plastic form go nearly as far as they do in Rome. Down to the very latest
of their series the Attic sarcophagi retain something of the classical Attic
manner. In conformity with this we find the portraits of the dead upon the lids
also follow a Greek tradition. Nearer to a baroque style are the
column-sarcophagi from Asia Minor, not only in their structure but also in the
movement of their figures and the restlessness of their composition. The large Sidamara coffin in Istambul is of this class and period. The latest stage appears on the Mattei Muses-sarcophagus in Rome which belongs to the
second half of the third century. But sarcophagi from the Eastern provinces
never approached the richness of those of Rome either in their wealth of
subject matter or in their lively juxtaposition of varying and various styles.
After the reign of Caracalla the East conspicuously lagged behind Rome in
intensity of artistic creation.
On the other hand we find at this time a highly
original manifestation in the Celtic-Germanic Marches associated with the
evolution of the grave-monuments of Treves and its neighbourhood.
The tombs with their multiplication of architectural motives and their excess
of ornament take on fantastic shapes. The use of soft sandstone induced the
employment of a pictorial treatment of the material. While in the East luminous
surfaces and dark hollows were separated by ridges sharp as knives, here softly
flowing transitions moved from convex high lights to deep shadows. Brilliant
characterization distinguishes the types of peasants and boatmen. No provincial
art of the third century is equal to this in independence and creative power.
Here is evidence of artistic gifts rooted in the unspoilt folk of the countryside. But the line of development ran parallel to the Roman
and reached its climax about the mid-century or shortly after. So it fitted
into the wide context that extended from Asia Minor to the Rhine frontier.
The advance of this pictorial baroque element to
an extreme about the middle of the century makes the marked reaction of the ‘Gallienic renaissance’ comprehensible. This was first
observed in portraiture, but manifests itself with equal distinctness in
reliefs at Rome itself. Plotinus and Gallienus, the friendship between emperor
and philosopher, these symbolize the spirit of the age. From the chaotic turmoils of the time the soul sought refuge in the peace of
mystery religions and of Neoplatonism. Art shows us that this longing finds its
satisfaction not by ecstatic moods but by calm clarity.
In the portrait of Gallienus there are apparent
two elements both striving to recover something of the older classical spirit.
The one, a Roman element, links itself to Augustan and Claudian prototypes; the
other tries to recover the Greek portrait technique of the Hadrianic and Antonine period. The neo-Augustan style is also met with in certain Roman
portraits of private personages. This reversal in style extends beyond the
immediate circle of Gallienus, who was himself but the representative of a
spiritual movement that touched the whole Roman Empire. Yet for all their
parallelism each local circle of culture went on its way. Asia Minor and Greece
had each its own special style for portraiture linked on to its own local
prototypes. The finest gold coins of Postumus minted
at Lugdunum show us, even more decisively than the
bust of Gallienus, the ideal type of the period distinguished by philosopher’s
beard and Greek classic forms. And the successors of Postumus down to Tetricus retained this fashion and form.
It is no mere chance that the portrait of Postumus made in Gaul is founded on Greek rather than Roman models. In Rome itself,
which was always ready to take up anything fresh, we find Roman and Greek
styles side by side with a continuation of the portraiture fashionable in the
forties of the third century.
In the list of subjects for sarcophagi lion-hunts
and fighting Amazons no longer predominate, for preference is now given to
scenes that depict the deceased, male or female, in the company of
philosophers, or Muses, or both. The lion-hunt, however, remains a popular
theme in the second half of the century, but only on works of inferior quality,
and it sometimes, significantly enough, appears on the back panels of
philosopher-sarcophagi. There is a sarcophagus in the Museo Torlonia made c. 250—60 that depicts the dead man and his wife as seventh Sage
and ninth Muse in a gathering of the Muses and Sages. Single motives like the centre group and the corresponding figures of seated philosophers
are probably indebted to the Asia Minor style; but the composition as a whole
follows the Roman tradition. In the restless ragged beards and locks there
remains an after-effect of the restless style of the previous period.
Otherwise, however, the tranquil shapes, the compact outlines of heads, the
simplified folds fit in with the changed mood which seeks to replace the
dramatic and the emotional by the solemn calm of an existence steeped in
philosophy and art. This mental change of attitude corresponds to the altered
situation of the whole age. And in like fashion the philosopher-sarcophagi of Rome
itself, made between 250 and 270, represent in particular the impact on Rome of
a flourishing philosophy—notably that of Plotinus and his disciples. In such
circumstances the oldest Christian carved sarcophagi could come into existence,
for they too could depict the dead man as sage and teacher amid symbolic
figures. There are the Roman sarcophagus from the Via Salaria and another from La Gayole, the latter made, like the
portraits of Gallic emperors, under the influence of Greek forms. It is
significant that the first Christian carved sarcophagi were made in the West,
where their future was also to lie.
All trace of
nervous unrest has vanished on the magnificent fragment of a
philosopher-sarcophagus in the Lateran. Here is a philosopher giving instruction
from a scroll unrolled wide open and surrounded not only by two listening
women, one of whom holds the scroll—symbol of learning—but by other
philosophers who turn their heads to converse with other persons now missing.
There is no proof that this was the coffin of Plotinus for it was probably
made in the sixties; but the master of Neoplatonism might well have been
depicted in this atmosphere of elevated solemnity. The head of the central
figure is inspired by this same lofty mood. The fashion of his hairdressing is
in the style of the second quarter of the century.
Through all these contrasts subsisting between
the sarcophagi of the lion-hunt period and of the philosopher period we can
still trace a straight line of evolution leading in the direction of late-classical
art; and we can see its negative no less than its positive sides. The feeling
for the organic structure of the figure grows steadily weaker. Composition in
relief, though occasionally chequered by
reminiscences of the classical style, carries on the form typified by the great Ludovisi battle-sarcophagus. Centralized composition
grows ever more popular. Along with this the tendency increases for a turning
of figures and whole scenes toward frontality. A medallion of Severus Alexander
shows a quadriga for the first time in frontal view, though the figures in the
chariot still turn sideways. Coins of Postumus give
the Imperial portrait almost full-face, and, what is still more important, the
scene of an Imperial allocution in a centralized symmetrical composition. A
turning-point of the utmost significance for the history of art is marked by the
frontal view of the reading philosopher of the Lateran sarcophagus. For in the
motive of the seated figure we have here a dividing line between antiquity and
the medieval.
In classical reliefs, as in those of the more
ancient East, the ceremonial presentation of a figure enthroned in the
foreground was avoided because it was out of harmony with the whole spirit of
the relief of antiquity. But in Italy after the first century of the Principate
we can observe a movement towards the presentation of a frontal view. For its
realization, however, the true feeling for plastic form had to be so far
extinguished that men were no longer disturbed by the contradiction between a
foreshortened thigh and its actual appearance in light and shade. From this
point onwards relief moves away from sculpture in the round and assimilates
itself to drawing.
If the new dating given to a rock-carving at
Shapur, assigning it to the reign of Shapur I, is correct, then it seems that a
frontal enthroned figure of a ruler in the middle of a centralized composition
appears for the first time in Mesopotamian art at about the same period. It is
strange that we do not find it sooner in Parthian and Sassanian art, which is
after all not plastic in character but based on painting and relief work. Have
we here a case of parallel development or one of
mutual influence? To what extent can the existence of artistic interrelations
be proved? Recent research has been successful in tracing the origins of the
late-classical in Classical art and the origins of Sassanian in Parthian art.
A whole series of apparent correspondences, in which we were at one time
inclined to see an orientalization of classical art,
appear now rather as converging manifestations. But the closer these lines of
development approach one another, the stronger grows the possibility that
occasional sparks of inspiration leap from one to the other. The reliefs
commemorating Shapur’s victory and his capture of
Valerian are influenced by Roman victory-reliefs. On the other hand
the concept of the ruler in the late-classical period and its outward
manifestations have a strong Oriental tinge. Shapur’s relief might have been influenced by a Valerian prototype. Yet the influence
might equally have been in the opposite direction. The decisive step, so far as
Rome was concerned, may well have been taken on some Imperial triumphal relief
or sarcophagus.
More interesting even than the similarity in
frontality between the reliefs of Shapur and the Lateran sarcophagus is the
difference in their technique. In its counterpoise the form of seated figure of
the Graeco-Roman philosopher is quite classical; in its symmetry of widespread
legs and in the stiffness of its body the figure of the Sassanian king is
thoroughly Oriental. The Roman prototype continues almost unchanged through a
series of imperial and divine figures into the Middle Ages, when it comes into
conflict with the Oriental motive that has likewise been carried on by later
Sassanian and then by Byzantine art.
A somewhat later Roman sarcophagus, made about
270 to 275, has in the centre the old-fashioned group
of men clasping hands (dextrarum iunctio) and on the right and left of this group
symbolical figures referring to the office of the deceased, who was an official
of the Annona. Though it is still in high relief the unplastic hardening of the figures is here more exaggerated. All the more moving is the
inner suffering which appears on the man’s face and seems to portray the depth
of his sensitiveness which still lives through the stiffening forms. In its
general form this portrait head belongs to the end of the ‘Gallienic renaissance.’ And in heads which belong either to the end of this period or to
the transition towards the next there now appears a definite tide of
expressionism produced by stressing and exaggerating the characteristic
features of the face. It was the current that had set in with the portrait of
Decius, but had been stayed awhile by the classical reaction.
In the paintings of the Catacombs we may perhaps
perceive about the middle of the century an increased use of the illusionistic
manner in the production of figures and a loosening in decorative matter. Then
comes a tendency to a firmer drawing of figuresubjects. But the style of the
age of Gallienus is not as yet really to be grasped. Popular paintings of
campaigns and hunting-scenes continued to be turned out, as we learn from a few
chance references. After his German victories Maximinus not only sent a written report to the Senate and People, but had pictures painted
‘ut erat bellum ipsum gestum,’ and had them set up in front of the Curia ‘ut facta eius pictura loqueretur.’
Gordian organized a silva, a hunt for which the whole Circus was
transformed into a forest, and this was depicted on a frieze on which no fewer
than 1320 animals were painted. The baroque zeal for huge masses could find
freer scope in painting than in carved reliefs. The painted records, to which
texts refer, of the new-fashioned games given by Carus, Carinus, and Numerianus in
the Circus must likewise have been large and packed with figures. From this
popular painting the tradition of art in the City of Rome derives much of its
power.
A peculiar contrast is provided by the
aristocratic art of portraits in miniature, worked out in gold-leaf upon glass.
Its earliest examples belong to the period from a.d. 230 to 250. It can hardly be
an accident that the art of miniatures reaches its height at the moment in
which sculpture in the grand style declines. It is the way of art on the small
scale to attain its zenith at just such times. These portraits in gold on glass
initiate a development which slowly advances towards the end of the fourth
century and leads to the efflorescence of late-classical illumination,
ivory-carving and embossed metal-work.
We know least of all of the
architecture of this period. This is certainly not due to the accident of
destruction, but to the fact that economic decline has a greater effect on
architecture than on other arts. There were now none of those private benefactors
who played so large a part in encouraging building during the second century.
Where there are large buildings, they are almost always associated with some
emperor. In Africa, which still prospered at this period, there was built in 229
a temple at Djemila dedicated to the Gens Septimia. An inscription records the erection by Gordian
III of a palace with adjoining baths at Volubilis in
Morocco. It was probably also at this time that the huge amphitheatre of El Djem (Thysdrus),
where Gordian I was proclaimed emperor, was built. If the circular temple at
Heliopolis is to be associated with Philip the Arabian, it would certainly fit
in with the baroque mood of the day. In and near Rome rose some considerable
imperial buildings, like the Villa of Gordian. In these and certain circular
tomb buildings we see that the problem of vaulting was what interested the
architects of the time. Only one building is comparatively well preserved, the
so-called temple of Minerva Medica, now held to be a Nymphaeum or part of a
block of Thermae of about 260. The dome rests on a decagonal substructure, from
the lower part of which apses curve out between supporting piers, while the
upper part is broken by windows. Ideas attempted in Hadrian’s Villa are here
carried through. It was not only the solution of the technical problem that was
bold and new, but also the widening and differentiating of the interior spaces,
and the complicated jointing of the exterior. This single building proves that
Roman architecture was still full of ideas.
III.
FROM DIOCLETIAN TO THE FOUNDING OF
CONSTANTINOPLE
In the history of art the term late-classical has
been adopted for the centuries that follow the true classical age. This term is
more comprehensive, and therefore more suitable, than ‘late-Roman’ which Riegl employed in his work which laid the foundations for
the study of this period. The late-classical is something more than a phase in
the transition from the ancient to the medieval world. Not only on account of
its long duration, but also by reason of its own artistic achievement, it must
be classed as a third phase of ancient art following on the Greek and the Roman
phases. Where are we to place its beginning and its end? Is an essential unity
to be found amid the diversity of its manifestations?
That this phase is still a part of ancient art is
clear from the fact that its conclusion is more definitely detached from
medieval art than is its beginning from the preceding classical art. In Italy
it does not come to an end with the fall of the Western Empire in 476, but with
the great invasion of the Lombards in 568. The Ostrogothic period in Italy is
the age of the last bloom of late-classical art. In the Eastern Empire the more
gradual decline extends in part to the period of the Slavonic invasions during
the second half of the sixth century, in part to that of the victories of the
Arabs in the following century. In the Byzantine Empire a tradition was even
retained up to the period of revival (ninth and tenth centuries). The flower of
the art, however, came to an end in the East almost at the same time as in the
West, after the death of Justinian. The part taken by national energy in the
achievements of the three centuries is diverse. Up to the end of the fourth
century the greater and more fruitful artistic production came from Italy,
after that from Asia Minor and Byzantium. The part played by barbarian
influence is not easy to estimate. We have now to reckon more than in previous
periods with the activities of travelling artists and of workshops.
The beginning of late-classical art is fixed
differently according to the different divisions of time favoured by the several studies that are concerned with it. Those scholars who write of
‘L’art Byzantin’—a term
more appropriate to the middle and late Byzantine epochs—mark the beginning by
the foundation of Constantinople, which is for the art-historian of no
significance as an epoch. Those concerned with Christian archaeology choose the
date which is most momentous for Church history, either that of the Edict of
Milan in 313, or the victory at the Milvian Bridge in 312. Both are too late
and, indeed, the second is immediately followed by the earliest of those
renaissance movements which are just as characteristic of the rhythm of the
late-classical period as of the classical age, and are perhaps even more impressive.
If we select the accession of Diocletian to mark the beginning of the
late-classical, this is because it amounts to an acknowledgment that the
spirit of the Dominus is the spirit permeating the art, in contrast to that of
the classical ages. The date is no more than a symbol. In actual fact the
change and the transition cover the period from 275 to 300.
An attempt to describe in brief the essence of
late-classical art must confine itself to touching on its most important
features. There appear side by side a change in pure artistic feeling and a
change in the spiritual relationship between spectator and work of art. What is
of the most decisive significance is the cessation of sculpture in the round,
which had occupied the central point in Greek art, but which had been forced on
the Romans by the power of Greek tradition, foreign though it actually was to
their inner sentiment. It may be that the type of the commemorative statue, and
especially of the figure of the emperor, was retained till the very end of the
period. But statues of gods disappear, and the manufacture of copies of Greek
masterpieces comes to an end. Relief work grows ever closer to painting. In the
earliest classical age the statue of the god served the beholder for prayer,
the portrait statue expressed veneration, while votive sculpture, reliefs and
paintings stood for the participation of a spectator in a play. But prayers
cease to be made to statues of the gods. Veneration of the portrait statue
rises to virtual worship. The function of painting and relief is no longer to
narrate but to preach; their appeal is no longer to a spectator but to a
congregation of the faithful. This alteration of spiritual and emotional values
leads to a form that gives expression to this new exaltation. This has
frequently been defined by the word ‘transcendentalism’; but it must be borne
in mind that the uplifting reality in late-classical art is something
fundamentally different from the otherworldliness of medieval art.
This transcendentalism, if we use the concept in
this narrowed sense, or this expressionism, is the central factor of
late-classical art, but it has to adjust itself to two other and quite
different forces. One of these is a hard realism, which derives from unplumbed
depths of popular feeling. In Rome itself new and vigorous sap flows from this
realism into late-classical art. Another type of realism, nourished on
different spiritual forces, was later on to influence Asiatic portraiture in
the fifth century. The second force is the might of classical art standing, as
it were, before the eyes of the late-classical in almost undiminished splendour. This was the cause of repeated renaissances
which harked back to classical Greek or classicizing Roman prototypes. Out of
the struggle of these three forces there grew the manifold tendencies, flowing,
following, merging into one another in late-classical art.
The foundations of the late-classical manner may
be recognized increasingly in the preceding centuries, and especially so in
Italy on those monuments in which a Roman and unclassical feeling is expressed.
Examples of this occur in Italian provincial art of the first century, and
afterwards in historical reliefs of the second century, notably those of the
Column of Marcus Aurelius. Then, with the period starting about 222, there
begins, as we have seen, the immediate precursors of the late-classical.
Coins of the seventies of the third century show
that in portraiture the expressionist tendency—temporarily submerged by the
classical phase of Gallienus’ reign—has recovered. This had already appeared with the portraiture
of Decius. The tendency to frontality, begun under Severus Alexander and
carried on under Postumus, is continued on medallions
of Probus, for it is there in the frontal composition of the adlocutio scene. And it is the portraits of Probus,
together with contemporary heads of private personages, that carry
along the features of late-classical art. In the representation of the hair the
tradition, never quite interrupted, of the second quarter of the century prevails
again. In the face there is emphasis on the harmony of those features that
determine the spiritual expression, like eyes, nose, and mouth, as contrasted
with the mere auxiliary features. In the time of Diocletian and the Tetrarchy
there appears in the face—now stylized beyond any natural shape for the sake of
expressive strength—a kind of native primitiveness derived from the coarser
popular art which was developing at this time in Roman reliefs. The head of the
colossal figure of Constantine from the Basilica in the Forum, with its new
dynamic simplification that enhances the strength of expression, and its new
exaggeration of the features, marks the creation of a new ideal of the Ruler.
Despite several classicizing interludes, this head had a marked influence on
subsequent Imperial portraiture.
The change of period is very clearly marked in
the history of the relief. In the East, Syria and Alexandria had never shown
much liking for this type of art. But Asia Minor and Greece possessed in their
monumental masons’ yards a rich supply of reliefs which, through the export of
sarcophagi, were regularly influencing the West. In the last decades of the
third century this trade died out. A few masons wandered over to Italy. In
contrast to Rome and the Western provinces, Asia Minor and Greece were poor in
reliefs during the ‘late-classical’ period. The few sarcophagi with
relief-decorations are isolated pieces. Economic stress and disorganization of
export trade certainly contributed to this state of affairs, but were hardly
its sole cause. There was here afoot a change in taste that was perhaps already
a presage of the much stronger divergence to come between Eastern and Western
Europe in the Middle Ages.
Rome, North Italy, and Gaul
were, up to the end of the fourth century, the regions responsible for an
abundant production of sarcophagi ornamented with reliefs. In Ravenna and in
Aquitania this tradition carried through into the sixth century. The actual
transition happens in Rome itself. The old themes and subjects—mythological
scenes and lion-hunts—so far as they can be assigned with tolerable certainty
to this period—show a growing hardness of style and a falling-off in artistic
merit. An example is the Adonis sarcophagus in the Lateran, apparently made
shortly before the reliefs of Constantine’s Arch. To the last decades of the
third century belongs the Borghese Phaeton-sarcophagus, on which the type of
composition planned for the great Ludovisi battlesarcophagus
has degenerated into stiff schematization. On Roman-made sarcophagi the Asiatic
type of figure on the lid now begins to appear more frequently. Perhaps this is
due to the arrival from Asia Minor of masons, whose hands also seem to betray
themselves in the composition and style of certain Hippolytus-sarcophagi in
Split and in Rome.
Besides this dying classical style we are aware
of the beginnings of a new movement that looks to the future. It is noteworthy
that it appears in association with new themes. Subjects which at first only
fit spaces on the lids of relief-sarcophagi presently begin to appear on the
fronts. They are derived from observation of daily life, shepherds and flocks,
feasts, a money-changer’s office, or the payment of rent. At the same time the
Christian sarcophagi begin to appear with their single scenes, Jonah and the
whale, the Good Shepherd, and the Eucharist, motives that were to acquire
tremendous importance in the following century first in Rome and then in Gaul.
Shortly before the Arch of Constantine there were produced the sarcophagi with
only one row of figures that depict scenes from the life of Christ and Peter.
Some have ascribed this crude, popular, narrative, realistic art to an influx
of provincials. But the provinces show no close antecedents. It is rather due
to the fact that, as the pressure of the old classical tradition relaxes, the
popular undercurrent, the provincial art of Rome itself, which has already been
discerned in previous centuries, now comes to the surface. In painting its
tradition had been uninterrupted since Republican days. The flower of Christian
relief carving in the late-classical West is indebted for its rise to the union
of the new, creative, Christian spirit with the related and still unexhausted
Roman popular art. Its origins lie in Rome.
On reliefs of this character, made between 280
and 310, the use of the drill for the hair, eyes, nose, mouth, and drapery
gradually becomes an extreme mannerism. It is therefore understandable that
after the end of the third century there followed a revulsion from this style,
causing the almost complete abandonment of the drill. It is, moreover,
possible that this was helped by
the importation, about this time, from Alexandria of sculptures in porphyry,
the almost peasant-like and provincial style of which was congenial to
contemporary Roman sentiment. This change in technique is carried through
within the popular realistic movement and almost reaches its completion with
the contemporary sculptural decoration of the Arch of Constantine.
We can see both techniques side by side employed
by two sculptors in the Roman Forum on the Decennalia base which is probably to be assigned to 303-4. This is simply a degenerate
descendant of the politico-religious type of relief of an earlier day. The Arch
of Galerius at Salonica with its wealth of ornament is of greater artistic
significance. Though in the general building-up of its reliefs, as well as in
some of the subject matter, there are perhaps Oriental influences derived from
the repertoire of Sassanian art, the style as a whole is based on the popular
historical relief, or on the historical painting of Rome. Moreover, the two
opposing techniques, one employing, the other rejecting, the use of the drill,
are again present side by side. But in certain details of the plastic work we
can still perceive a last echo of Greek reliefwork,
perhaps introduced by assistant masons who still had some connection with the
latest sarcophagus factories of Greece.
Popular Roman relief faced a task
of historical importance in the decoration of the Arch of Constantine in 315.
This arch is a milestone in the history of art. The use of the drill has
vanished from the narrow reliefs over the side arches, and its last traces may
be observed in the reliefs of the column-bases. In the scenes of the triumphal
procession, and especially in those of the siege of Rome and the victory on the
Milvian Bridge there is all the rough forcefulness of popular art. The Emperor
over life-size, the merciless character of the scene of victory, these are
Roman features the gradual growth of which can be watched from the beginning of
the second century. Here are no worn-out motives deriving from a long
tradition. The victorious soldiers are thrusting with convincing force, as do
the hunters on some hunt-sarcophagi of a new type invented about this period.
In contrast to these chronicle-like pictures are the static ceremonial scenes
with their centralized and frontal compositions corresponding to the increase
of similar subjects and designs on medallions of the age of Constantine. In the
East rows of identical figures were employed for such ceremonial subjects to
increase the impressive effect; here in the West the symmetrical composition is
enlivened by many new and freshly observed touches of realism, episodes,
national types, national costumes and the like. These reliefs are not
masterpieces of great art, but they are instinct with a vigour that was to guarantee the Roman relief a long life when, after the foundation
of Constantinople and the removal of the Court, a strong national
consciousness grew up in Rome and Italy.
The architectural structure of the Arch of Constantine,
in contrast to that of Septimius Severus in the Forum, is inspired by strong
classical sentiment. It is the expression of a movement which may be termed ‘Constantinian classicism.’ It stands at the end of a powerful movement in
architectural creation. The currents and undercurrents that reach the
late-classical from the previous age can best be traced in portraits and
reliefs; but high above these stands the great efflorescence of architecture,
which above all marks out the true character of the period of the Tetrarchy and
Constantine. In the buildings of the Tetrarchy Roman art rose once again, after
the Flavian and Trajanic periods, to a great
achievement which still impresses us today.
Besides Rome there now appear the new Imperial
residences in Nicomedia, Thessalonica, Milan, and Treves, and in addition to
these the shifting Imperial courts and headquarters. It was not merely the ‘infinita quaedam cupiditas aedificandi,’ the
‘building mania’ of Diocletian himself that was here manifested. His
co-regents and their followers also had great buildings to their credit. It is
not their mere numbers, but rather the size and boldness of the architectural
conceptions in these structures that is remarkable. Is this architectural
climax under the Tetrarchy a kind of international manifestation with parallel
developments in the several Western and Eastern parts of the Empire, or is it
the product of one people, whether Roman, Greek, or barbarian? In the various
Imperial residences there is inevitably visible an element of local tradition,
displayed especially in technique and handicraft, but also on higher planes of
work. Furthermore, there seem to have been travelling workshops with their
decorators and masons, and we can apparently recognize influences from Asia
Minor at work in the Balkans and in Rome. But the architects certainly
travelled too; and the main architectural concepts are so definitely Roman,
that we can undoubtedly treat the buildings of the Tetrarchy as the latest
flowering of Roman Architecture.
The military tradition in which Diocletian was
reared, and his national Roman sentiment, explain why his place of retirement
at Split, as well as the palace at Palmyra and perhaps also other residences,
was built in the form of a Roman camp. We recall the derivation of the Forum Traianum from the Praetorium of a camp. The title castra, preserved in an inscription at Palmyra, applies, like the word stratopedon, not to a fortified defensive
camp, but to the imperial court or headquarters camp. The masterly character
of the planning which distinguished architecture under the Tetrarchy is
apparent in the clever use of variation. At Palmyra, for example, by reason of
the general lie of the landscape, the ceremonial rooms form the central point
of the whole complex. At Split, on the other hand, these rooms face the sea,
turning their back on the camp. The imperial Baths at Treves have a
ground-plan which combines essential unity with movement. The numerous apses in
which the inner rooms project outwards lend great variety to the plastic form
of the exterior. By the side of this symphony of cross-vaults, domes and
half-domes there stands a building serving quite another purpose; the plain,
simple, large hall of the flat-roofed basilica.
The Baths of Diocletian in Rome followed the
traditional ground-plan of the other great Roman Thermae. But there are
differences too. With dominating sureness and simplicity the whole central
complex is drawn together and becomes a unit, while the side-courts get a new main
axis. The plan of Constantine’s Baths was adapted to the configuration of the
ground. It was a very bold idea, both technically and artistically, to isolate
the kind of unit that had hitherto formed the cross-vaulted hall in Thermae,
and to employ this design for building the detached Basilica of Maxentius,
completed by Constantine. The latter altered it somewhat by adding a
side-façade and a corresponding apse. The somewhat purposeless central hall,
that had formerly been incorporated in the great Baths, now achieved, in the
building of Maxentius, a kind of structural direction which terminated in an
apse. The six large chambers, which lie between the piers that take the thrust,
and which in the Thermae had served as passage ways or departments of the Baths,
were now thrown open so as to form real spaces which are part of the main hall.
They were not aisles flanking a nave, but they opened out like six gigantic sidechapels set at right angles to the hall. Similar
structures exist in the Liwans of Sassanian palaces.
Mention must be made of Diocletian’s reconstruction of the Curia in the Forum
with its cross-vaults springing straight out of the walls, of the cellae of the double-temple of Venus and Roma vaulted by
Maxentius, of the gigantic structures of the Circus of Maxentius, as well as of
further experiments with the problem of the circular building. This finally
culminated in a new production exemplified by the tomb of S. Costanza, in which
the dome rests upon a ring of double columns which separate the central
structure from a barrel , vaulted
ambulatory.
The Basilica of Maxentius marks both the climax
and the end of ancient Roman-classical development, which found no continuation.
But early Constantinian architects created one monumental type of building
which was to have a greater after-effect than any other. The Lateran Basilica
was probably the first large Christian ecclesiastical building, for the
tradition holds that it is mater et caput omnium ecclesiarum. A fixed type for the Christian basilica had not previously existed save on a
small scale. Of course certain basic principles like the separation of clergy
and congregation, and the significant relation of the whole building to the
altar, would already have been established in various early meeting rooms. The
Christian Basilica with its flat wooden roof has been regarded as retrograde
when compared with the Basilica of Maxentius. But it is just as deliberately
built on a different plan as is the Basilica of Treves on a plan differing from
that of the neighbouring Thermae. The desire for the
parallel movement of nave and aisles could not be realized in a cross-vaulted
hall. Furthermore, a view obtained which was contrary to that prevalent since
vaulting was adopted for romanesque architecture, and
the vault was thought of as something secular contrasting with the sacred,
horizontal, coffered ceiling of the temple. The monumental type of the
Christian basilica was created by architects of genius to serve the needs of
Christian worship. It is the peculiarity of the actual Roman basilica with
transepts that the impressive flowing movement of nave and aisles is arrested
by the transepts and turned to serenity. The creation of the Christian basilica
is only properly appreciated when it is revealed as the most brilliant
achievement of the last efflorescence of Roman architecture. A second climax
was indeed reached by ancient architecture, but it was a unique achievement and
it was final. This was Justinian’s church of the Holy Wisdom in Constantinople,
grounded on a long development that was rooted in the Hellenism of Asia Minor.
The victory of the Church resulted in a
classicizing of Christian art. It coincided with a reaction in portraits and
relief work against the dry style of the Tetrarchy. After the year 315 there
appear beside the expressionist portraits others that link on to an Augustan
style. With this classicism there is associated a return to a more plastic kind
of modelling. There is pure Hellenistic inspiration, short-lived though it
was, in the creation of Christian sculpture in the round. One splendid work of
art made in Egypt for the Emperor, the porphyry sarcophagus destined to hold
the remains of Helena, shows traces of a revolt against primitive expressionism
and of a return to the classical forms of an earlier style. From the time of
the reliefs on the Arch of Constantine we can trace, both on the pagan and
more especially on the Christian sarcophagi of Rome, a striving after more
beauty of form and nobility of expression; and this attains an apex in the year
359 with the sarcophagus of Junius Bassus.
Thus in every branch of art the early years of
Constantine marked the first beginnings of a tide that was to sweep beyond the
year 330 in an unbroken flood.
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