From monumental tombs and domestic decoration, to acts of benefaction and portraits of ancestors, Roman freed slaves, or freedmen, were prodigious patrons of art and architecture. Traditionally, however, the history of Roman art has been told primarily through the monumental remains of the emperors and ancient writers who worked in their circles. Lauren Petersen critically investigates the notion of freedman art in scholarship, dependent as it is on elite-authored texts that are filled with hyperbole and stereotype of freedmen.
From monumental tombs and domestic decoration, to acts of benefaction and portraits of ancestors, Roman freed slaves, or freedmen, were prodigious patrons of art and architecture. Traditionally, however, the history of Roman art has been told primarily through the monumental remains of the emperors and ancient writers who worked in their circles. Lauren Petersen critically investigates the notion of freedman art in scholarship, dependent as it is on elite-authored texts that are filled with hyperbole and stereotype of freedmen.
Lauren Hackworth Petersen is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Delaware. A scholar of Roman art and architecture, she has published in Arethusa and The Art Bulletin, among other journals, and has received grants from the American Academy in Rome, the National Endowment of the Humanities, the Getty Foundation and the American Council of Learned Societies.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: the Roman freedman, 'freedman art', and Trimalchio Public life and assimilation 1. Rebuilding Pompeii: the Popidius family and the Temple of Isis 2. The visibility of the Augustales in Pompeii 3. Memory-making in the funerary realm: the tomb of the baker in Rome Social integration: domus and family 4. 'Freedman taste' in domus decoration 5. To claim a domus: the house of the Caecilii at Pompeii 6. Family and community at the Isola Sacra Necropolis: the Tomb of the Varii.
Introduction: the Roman freedman, 'freedman art', and Trimalchio Public life and assimilation 1. Rebuilding Pompeii: the Popidius family and the Temple of Isis 2. The visibility of the Augustales in Pompeii 3. Memory-making in the funerary realm: the tomb of the baker in Rome Social integration: domus and family 4. 'Freedman taste' in domus decoration 5. To claim a domus: the house of the Caecilii at Pompeii 6. Family and community at the Isola Sacra Necropolis: the Tomb of the Varii.
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