It must have been bliss to be an archaeologist during the 18th
Century, when the Roman towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum were
rediscovered. Take the Villa of the Papyri outside Herculaneum: 85
sculptures were uncovered at this site alone between 1750 and 1761.
But
it could be awkward too. Imagine how the excavators must have felt when
they unearthed the most infamous of these sculptures in the presence of
the king of Naples and Sicily on a spring day in 1752. Carved from a
single block of Italian marble, it showed the wild god Pan making love
to a goat. With his right hand, Pan grabs the nanny goat’s tufted beard,
yanking forward her head so that he can stare deep into her eyes. The
king was not amused.
Unlike most of the 18th-Century finds from
Herculaneum and Pompeii, the sculpture was hidden away, available to
view only with the monarch’s permission. Yet, from the moment of its
discovery, the statue generated curiosity as well as horror. It quickly
became a fashionable sight for Englishmen gallivanting around Europe on
the Grand Tour. The 18th-Century English sculptor Joseph Nollekens
produced a terracotta replica from memory – though his bug-eyed animal
is far more surprised by Pan’s attentions than the Roman goat, which
seems almost complicit.
Without realising, Nollekens had stressed
the scene’s undertones of bestiality and rape – even though the original
may have appeared much less violent to the Romans. Different cultures
view the same things in different ways. Art that we consider shockingly
erotic or violent was commonplace in the Roman world.
Now, the
sculpture of Pan and the goat is setting pulses racing once again. On
loan from the National Archaeological Museum in Naples, where it is
usually shown in the ‘Secret Cabinet’ alongside other erotic material
from the ancient Roman world, the statue features in the British
Museum’s major exhibition Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum, currently on show in London. A discreet label forewarns visitors that the exhibition “contains sexually explicit material”.
Grim gardens
Today
it is tempting to view the sculpture as a piece of vile erotica – but
I’m not so sure. The Villa of the Papyri also contained a library full
of hundreds of scrolls, suggesting that the man who owned the sculpture
was sophisticated and well-read.
Perhaps he was also a provocative
pervert who enjoyed scandalising his guests. But even a cursory
acquaintance with the Roman world suggests that this wasn’t necessarily
the case. Today some people decorate their gardens with gnomes. The
Romans preferred sexier, gutsier, more bloodthirsty subjects. Elsewhere
in the British Museum’s exhibition, we encounter two sublime marble
sculptures depicting tense stags hollering with fear as they are
overcome by snarling hunting dogs. The hounds gnash at the ears of their
prey, using their claws to gouge deep into flesh.
These
sculptures aren’t lewd, but they are extraordinarily violent. While we
can appreciate the way in which the sculptor arranged a chaotic subject
into coherent forms, they still seem like strange choices for garden
ornaments, by our standards. So does a nearby marble statuette of a
pot-bellied Hercules, clearly the worse for wear following a drunken
banquet, about to take a pee.
But the Romans couldn’t get enough
of this sort of stuff. One of my favourite Roman sculptures is the
Hanging Marsyas. This presents the bearded satyr, Marsyas, bound to a
tree. He is about to be flayed alive as punishment for challenging the
lyre-playing god Apollo to a musical contest (inevitably, he lost).
Several sculptures depicting this scene have survived, including a
handful carved from purple-veined marble, which offers a grisly sense of
the bloody flesh about to be revealed by the torturer’s knife.
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