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{{short description|Ancient Greek mosaic art from Delos, Crete}}<br />
{{short description|Ancient Greek mosaic art from Delos, Crete}}
{{featured article}}
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| image1 = Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 05.jpg
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| image2 = Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 09.jpg
| width2 = 177
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| footer = A [[Hellenistic art|Hellenistic Greek]] [[mosaic]] depicting the god [[Dionysos]] as a winged [[daimon]] riding on a tiger,{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}}{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}} from the House of Dionysos at [[Delos]] in the [[South Aegean]] [[Administrative regions of Greece|region]] of [[Greece]], late 2nd century BC, [[Archaeological Museum of Delos]]
}}

The '''mosaics of Delos''' are a significant body of [[Ancient Greek art#Mosaics|ancient Greek mosaic art]]. Most of the surviving [[mosaic]]s from [[Delos]], [[Greece]], [[Aegean Islands|an island]] in the [[Cyclades]], date to the last half of the 2nd century BC and early 1st century BC, during the [[Hellenistic period]] and beginning of the [[Roman Greece|Roman period of Greece]]. Hellenistic mosaics were no longer produced after roughly 69 BC, [[Mithridatic Wars|due to warfare]] with the [[Kingdom of Pontus]] and the subsequently abrupt decline of the island's population and position as a major trading center. Among [[Hellenistic Greece|Hellenistic Greek]] archaeological sites, Delos contains one of the highest concentrations of surviving mosaic artworks. Approximately half of all surviving [[Tessellation|tessellated]] Greek mosaics from the Hellenistic period come from Delos.

The paved walkways of Delos range from simple [[pebble]] or [[chipseal|chip-pavement]] constructions to elaborate mosaic floors composed of [[tesserae]]. Most [[Motif (visual arts)|motifs]] contain simple [[geometric pattern]]s, while only a handful utilize the ''[[opus tessellatum]]'' and ''[[opus vermiculatum]]'' techniques to create lucid, naturalistic, and richly colored scenes and figures. Mosaics have been found in [[Greek temple|places of worship]], [[Ancient Greek architecture|public buildings]], and [[Oikos|private homes]], the latter usually containing either an irregular-shaped [[floor plan]] or [[peristyle]] central courtyard.

Although there are minor traces of [[Punic]]-[[Phoenicia]]n and [[Ancient Rome|Romano]]-[[History of Italy|Italian]] influence, the Delian mosaics generally conform to the major trends found in [[Hellenistic art]]. The same wealthy patrons who commissioned paintings and [[Ancient Greek sculpture|sculptures]] at Delos may have also been involved in hiring mosaic artists from abroad. Delian mosaics share characteristics with those in other parts of the Greek world, such as [[Macedonia (ancient kingdom)|Macedonian]] mosaics in [[Pella]]. They also bear some attributes with Greek painting traditions and often employ a similar black-background technique found in [[red-figure pottery]] of the [[Classical Greece|Classical period]]. Some of the styles and techniques found at Delos are evident in [[Roman art]] and [[Roman mosaic|mosaics]], although [[Roman Republic|contemporary Roman]] examples from [[Pompeii]], for instance, reveal significant differences in the production and design of mosaics in the [[Greek East and Latin West|western versus eastern Mediterranean]].


==Dating==
==Dating==
{{multiple image
{{multiple image
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|image1=Mosaic Lykourgos Ambrosia Delos Museum.jpg| width1=190|
| image1 = Mosaic Lykourgos Ambrosia Delos Museum.jpg
| width1 = 190|
|image2=Mosaic with pigeons, ca 100 BC, Delos, 143461.jpg|width2=284|
| image2 = Mosaic with pigeons, ca 100 BC, Delos, 143461.jpg
| width2 = 284|
| footer = Left: King [[Lycurgus of Thrace]] killing [[Ambrosia]], from the Northern Quarter of Delos,{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=14}} [[Archaeological Museum of Delos]] <br>Right: a Delian mosaic with pigeons flocking around a bowl, Archaeological Museum of Delos
| footer = Left: King [[Lycurgus of Thrace]] killing [[Ambrosia (Hyades)| Ambrosia]], from the Northern Quarter of Delos,{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=14}} [[Archaeological Museum of Delos]] <br>Right: a Delian mosaic with pigeons flocking around a bowl, Archaeological Museum of Delos
}}
}}


Archaeological excavations of Delos by the [[French School at Athens]] began in 1872,{{sfnp|UNESCO|}} with initial descriptions of the mosaics published in a report by French archaeologist Jacques Albert Lebègue in 1876.{{sfnp|Lebègue|1876|pp=130-131, 133, 134-135, 140}} Precisely 354 [[mosaic]]s from [[Delos]] survive and have been studied by French archaeologist [[:fr:Philippe Bruneau (archéologue)|Philippe Bruneau]].{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #1}} Most date to the late [[Hellenistic period]], contemporaneous with the late [[Roman Republic]] (i.e. the last half of the 2nd century BC and early 1st century BC).{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}{{sfnp|Chamoux|2002|p=375}}{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=48}}{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #2; 255}} A handful were dated to the [[Classical Greece|Classical period]],{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}} with one mosaic attributed to the [[Roman Empire|Imperial Roman era]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}} Bruneau believed that nominally undated pieces, on the basis of their styles, were produced within the same period as majority of examples, roughly between 133 and 88 BC.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}
Archaeological excavations of Delos by the [[French School at Athens]] began in 1872,{{sfnp|UNESCO|}} with initial descriptions of the mosaics published in a report by French archaeologist Jacques Albert Lebègue in 1876.{{sfnp|Lebègue|1876|pp=130-131, 133, 134-135, 140}} Precisely 354 mosaics from Delos survive and have been studied by French archaeologist [[:fr:Philippe Bruneau (archéologue)|Philippe Bruneau]].{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #1}} Most date to the late [[Hellenistic period]], contemporaneous with the late [[Roman Republic]] (i.e. the last half of the 2nd century BC and early 1st century BC).{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}{{sfnp|Chamoux|2002|p=375}}{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=48}}{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #2; 255}} A handful were dated to the [[Classical Greece|Classical period]],{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}} with one mosaic attributed to the [[Roman Empire|Imperial Roman era]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}} Bruneau believed that nominally undated pieces, on the basis of their styles, were produced within the same period as the majority of examples, roughly between 133 and 88 BC.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=30}}


In 167 or 166 BC, after the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] victory in the [[Third Macedonian War]], Rome ceded the island of Delos to the [[History of Athens|Athenians]], who expelled most of the original inhabitants.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=14}} The [[Battle of Corinth (146 BC)|Roman destruction of Corinth]] in 146 BC allowed Delos to at least partially assume the former's role as the premier trading center of [[History of Greece|Greece]]. Delos' commercial prosperity, construction activity, and population waned significantly after the island was assaulted by the forces of [[Mithridates VI of Pontus|Mithridates VI]] of [[Kingdom of Pontus|Pontus]] in 88 and 69 BC, during the [[Mithridatic Wars]] with Rome.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=14, 32}} Despite the invasions by Pontus, the island was only gradually abandoned after Rome secured a more [[Roman commerce|direct trading link]] with the [[Orient]] that marginalized Delos as a pivotal midway point [[Indo-Roman trade relations|for trade]] leading [[Sino-Roman relations|to the East]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #2}}
In 167 or 166 BC, after the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] victory in the [[Third Macedonian War]], Rome ceded the island of Delos to the [[History of Athens|Athenians]], who expelled most of the original inhabitants.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=14}} The [[Battle of Corinth (146 BC)|Roman destruction of Corinth]] in 146 BC allowed Delos to at least partially assume the former's role as the premier trading center of Greece. Delos' commercial prosperity, construction activity, and population waned significantly after the island was assaulted by the forces of [[Mithridates VI of Pontus|Mithridates VI]] of [[Kingdom of Pontus|Pontus]] in 88 and 69 BC, during the [[Mithridatic Wars]] with Rome.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=14, 32}} Despite the invasions by Pontus, the island was only gradually abandoned after Rome secured a more [[Roman commerce|direct trading link]] with the [[Orient]] that marginalized Delos as a pivotal midway point [[Indo-Roman trade relations|for trade]] leading [[Sino-Roman relations|to the East]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=253, footnote #2}}


==Characteristics==
==Characteristics==
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===Patterns and motifs===
===Patterns and motifs===
Among the various patterns and motifs found in Delian mosaics is the triple-colored [[lozenge]] that creates a three-dimensional illusion of cubes in [[Perspectivity|perspective]] for the viewer.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}}{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}} This pattern appears in fifteen different locations, making it one of the most common.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}} Other motifs include waves and stepped triangles, while major themes include [[Maritime history|maritime]], [[History of theatre|theatrical]], [[Natural environment|natural]], or [[Greek mythology|mythological]] objects and figures.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=46}} The single wave pattern, a common motif in [[Hellenistic art]], is the most predominant type of border design for mosaics at Delos and can be found at other sites such as [[Arsameia]] (albeit arranged in the opposite direction).{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=256}}{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|p=10}} The [[Rosette (design)|rosette]] motif, which is found in the mosaics of various Hellenistic sites across the Mediterranean, is often coupled with single-wave borders in Delian mosaics.{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|pp=9–10}} The typical Hellenistic [[palmette]] motif is used in a mosaic of Delos to fill the four corners around a central rosette motif.{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|p=11}} The illusion of three-dimensional [[relief]] in the figured scenes of Delian mosaics was usually achieved by the use of [[polychrome]], with white, black, yellow, red, blue and green hues.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=256}}
Among the various patterns and motifs found in Delian mosaics is the triple-colored [[Lozenge (shape)|lozenge]] that creates a three-dimensional illusion of cubes in [[Perspectivity|perspective]] for the viewer.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}}{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}} This pattern appears in fifteen different locations, making it one of the most common.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}} Other motifs include waves and stepped triangles, while major themes include [[Maritime history|maritime]], [[History of theatre|theatrical]], [[Natural environment|natural]], or [[Greek mythology|mythological]] objects and figures.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=46}} The single wave pattern, a common motif in [[Hellenistic art]], is the most predominant type of border design for mosaics at Delos and can be found at other sites such as [[Arsameia]] (albeit arranged in the opposite direction).{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=256}}{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|p=10}} The [[Rosette (design)|rosette]] motif, which is found in the mosaics of various Hellenistic sites across the Mediterranean, is often coupled with single-wave borders in Delian mosaics.{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|pp=9–10}} The typical Hellenistic [[palmette]] motif is used in a mosaic of Delos to fill the four corners around a central rosette motif.{{sfnp|Hachlili|2009|p=11}} The illusion of three-dimensional [[relief]] in the figured scenes of Delian mosaics was usually achieved by the use of [[polychrome]], with white, black, yellow, red, blue and green hues.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=256}}


The origins of the composition, techniques, layout, and style of Delian mosaics can be found in 5th-century BC pebble mosaics of [[Olynthus]] in the [[Chalcidice]] of northern Greece, with mosaics positioned in the center of cement floors and utilizing garland, meander, and wave patterns around a centralized motif or figured scene.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|pp=259–260}} This design scheme is similar to that of 4th-century BC mosaics of [[Pella]] in [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], although the pebble mosaics there employ a wider range of colors to create the effects of volume.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}} The transition from pebble mosaics to more complex tessellated mosaics perhaps originated in Hellenistic-[[Greek Sicily]] during the 3rd century BC, developed at sites such as [[Morgantina]] and [[Syracuse, Sicily|Syracuse]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1979|p=265}} Much like Olynthus, mosaics of Morgantina contain the garland, wave, and meander patterns, although the latter was finally executed with [[Perspective (graphical)|perspective]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}}
The origins of the composition, techniques, layout, and style of Delian mosaics can be found in 5th-century BC [[pebble mosaic]]s of [[Olynthus]] in the [[Chalcidice]] of northern Greece, with mosaics positioned in the center of cement floors and utilizing garland, meander, and wave patterns around a centralized motif or figured scene.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|pp=259–260}} This design scheme is similar to that of 4th-century BC mosaics of [[Pella]] in [[Macedonia (region)|Macedonia]], although the pebble mosaics there employ a wider range of colors to create the effects of volume.{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}} The transition from pebble mosaics to more complex tessellated mosaics perhaps originated in Hellenistic-[[Greek Sicily]] during the 3rd century BC, developed at sites such as [[Morgantina]] and [[Syracuse, Sicily|Syracuse]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1979|p=265}} Much like Olynthus, mosaics of Morgantina contain the garland, wave, and meander patterns, although the latter was finally executed with [[Perspective (graphical)|perspective]].{{sfnp|Joyce|1979|p=260}}


===Culture and ethnic origins===
===Culture and ethnic origins===
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|image1=Delos Museum Mosaik 02.jpg| width1=220|
|image1=Delos Museum Mosaik 02.jpg| width1=165|
|image2=Delos Museum Mosaik Vogel 01.jpg|width2=300|
|image2=Delos Museum Mosaik Vogel 01.jpg|width2=225|
| footer = Delian mosaics with birds and [[foliage]], c. 100 BC
| footer = Delian mosaics with birds and [[foliage]], c. 100 BC
}}
}}
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===Comparisons with Roman Pompeii===
===Comparisons with Roman Pompeii===
{{multiple image
{{multiple image
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|image1=Face of Dionysos (detail), mosaic of the House of Dionysos, Delos, Greece, 2nd century BC.jpg| width1=210|
|image1=Face of Dionysos (detail), mosaic of the House of Dionysos, Delos, Greece, 2nd century BC.jpg| width1=200|
|image2=Battle of Issus MAN Napoli Inv10020 n02.jpg|width2=225|
|image2=Alexander the Great mosaic (cropped).jpg|width2=200|
| footer = '''Left image''': detail of the face of [[Dionysos]], from a [[mosaic]] in the House of Dionysos, [[Delos]], Greece, late 2nd century BC <br> '''Right image''': detail of [[Alexander the Great]], from the ''[[Alexander Mosaic]]'', [[House of the Faun]], [[Pompeii]], Italy, late 2nd or early 1st century BC
| footer = '''Left image''': detail of the face of [[Dionysos]], from a [[mosaic]] in the House of Dionysos, [[Delos]], Greece, late 2nd century BC <br> '''Right image''': detail of [[Alexander the Great]], from the ''[[Alexander Mosaic]]'', [[House of the Faun]], [[Pompeii]], Italy, late 2nd or early 1st century BC
}}
}}
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The northern quarter of Delos contains the Jewelry Quarter, where older structures such as workshops and other archaeological remains dating to the 3rd century BC and early 2nd century BC have been discovered.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=32}} By the second half of the 2nd century BC these were replaced by private homes built in the most characteristic fashion for Delos: a narrow, rectangular floor plan with a central courtyard, a ''[[Vestibule (architecture)|vestibule]]'' service room in the front, and a larger, main room in the rear. The quarter of the House of the Masks is the only area of Delos without this archetypal house plan.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=40–41}} Some houses of the Northern Quarter feature mosaic decorations with mythological scenes, including [[Lycurgus of Thrace]] and [[Ambrosia]] in an upper-story mosaic, as well as [[Athena]] and [[Hermes]] together with a seated woman in a main-room mosaic.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=46}}
The northern quarter of Delos contains the Jewelry Quarter, where older structures such as workshops and other archaeological remains dating to the 3rd century BC and early 2nd century BC have been discovered.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=32}} By the second half of the 2nd century BC these were replaced by private homes built in the most characteristic fashion for Delos: a narrow, rectangular floor plan with a central courtyard, a ''[[Vestibule (architecture)|vestibule]]'' service room in the front, and a larger, main room in the rear. The quarter of the House of the Masks is the only area of Delos without this archetypal house plan.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=40–41}} Some houses of the Northern Quarter feature mosaic decorations with mythological scenes, including [[Lycurgus of Thrace]] and [[Ambrosia]] in an upper-story mosaic, as well as [[Athena]] and [[Hermes]] together with a seated woman in a main-room mosaic.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=46}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Athene Hermes 04.jpg|Detail of the centerpiece of a mosaic from the Jewelry Quarter of Delos depicting [[Hermes]] and [[Athena]], 2nd century BC
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Athene Hermes 04.jpg|Detail of the centerpiece of a mosaic from the Jewelry Quarter of Delos depicting [[Hermes]] and [[Athena]], 2nd century BC
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Athene Hermes 07.jpg|Detail of a mosaic from the Jewelry Quarter of Delos depicting a bull's head with foliage
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Athene Hermes 07.jpg|Detail of a mosaic from the Jewelry Quarter of Delos depicting a bull's head with foliage
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Most houses in the crowded Theatre Quarter of Delos have irregular-shaped floor plans (such as [[trapezoid]]al designs), as opposed to square or rectangular designs.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=33}} The narrow and irregular [[street grid]] is unlike that of other quarters, where streets usually meet at approximately right angles.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=31}} Similar to the majority of excavated homes of Delos, those in the Theatre Quarter feature an open courtyard without [[portico]]es, instead of the peristyle layout with columns.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=33–34}} Some of the houses in the Theatre Quarter lack interior decoration altogether, with neither wall murals nor mosaics, which is unusual for most Delian homes.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=48}}
Most houses in the crowded Theatre Quarter of Delos have irregular-shaped floor plans (such as [[trapezoid]]al designs), as opposed to square or rectangular designs.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=33}} The narrow and irregular [[street grid]] is unlike that of other quarters, where streets usually meet at approximately right angles.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=31}} Similar to the majority of excavated homes of Delos, those in the Theatre Quarter feature an open courtyard without [[portico]]es, instead of the peristyle layout with columns.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|pp=33–34}} Some of the houses in the Theatre Quarter lack interior decoration altogether, with neither wall murals nor mosaics, which is unusual for most Delian homes.{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=48}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Delos Theaterviertel 22.jpg|A mosaic with a dolphin and anchor design
File:Delos Theaterviertel 22.jpg|A mosaic with a dolphin and anchor design
File:Delos Theaterviertel 18.jpg|The ruins of a home with a mosaic floor
File:Delos Theaterviertel 18.jpg|The ruins of a home with a mosaic floor
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The Delos mosaic of [[Dionysos]] riding a tiger in the House of Dionysos is one of the finest examples of ''opus vermiculatum'', according to Dunbabin, and is comparable to the Dionysos riding a leopard from the House of the Masks if not the simpler [[:File:Dionysos on a cheetah, Pella, Greece.jpg|pebble-mosaic predecessor]] from the Macedonian capital at Pella.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}} A key thematic difference, however, are the wings of Dionysos that suggest his incarnation as a [[daimon]] instead of a god.{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=32–33}} The tesserae materials, made of [[Hellenistic glass|glass]], [[faience]], [[terracotta]] and natural stones, are fashioned into pieces measuring roughly one millimeter square, allowing for sharp detail and an elaborate color scheme.{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=32–33}}
The Delos mosaic of [[Dionysos]] riding a tiger in the House of Dionysos is one of the finest examples of ''opus vermiculatum'', according to Dunbabin, and is comparable to the Dionysos riding a leopard from the House of the Masks if not the simpler [[:File:Dionysos on a cheetah, Pella, Greece.jpg|pebble-mosaic predecessor]] from the Macedonian capital at Pella.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=32}} A key thematic difference, however, are the wings of Dionysos that suggest his incarnation as a [[daimon]] instead of a god.{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=32–33}} The tesserae materials, made of [[Hellenistic glass|glass]], [[faience]], [[terracotta]] and natural stones, are fashioned into pieces measuring roughly one millimeter square, allowing for sharp detail and an elaborate color scheme.{{sfnp|Brecoulaki|2016|p=678}}{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=32–33}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 01.jpg|[[Dionysos]] riding a tiger
File:Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 01.jpg|[[Dionysos]] riding a tiger
Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 08.jpg|Close-up view and detail of the winged Dionysos and the tiger
Delos Museum Mosaik Dionysos 08.jpg|Close-up view and detail of the winged Dionysos and the tiger
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The House of the Masks is named after the mosaic motif of [[Theatre of ancient Greece|theatre masks]] decorating ivy scrolls arranged in strips around a central surface area decorated in a cubic pattern.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} The more intricately decorated mosaics are found in four different rooms branching off from the peristyle courtyard paved with marble chips, with corridor mosaics utilizing [[amphora]] fragments.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=33–35}} In the center of one mosaic is the figure of Dionysos riding a leopard against a similar black background to the mosaic in the House of Dionysos.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} Another central mosaic features a flute player and a dancing figure, the latter perhaps representing [[Silenus]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} Only the Dionysos figure employs the ''vermiculatum'' method. The other mosaics of the house fail to achieve the [[Realism (arts)|naturalism]] of finer figure scenes and motifs, but they nevertheless demonstrate an attempt at mimicking their [[illusionist]] qualities with the tesselated technique.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}}
The House of the Masks is named after the mosaic motif of [[Theatre of ancient Greece|theatre masks]] decorating ivy scrolls arranged in strips around a central surface area decorated in a cubic pattern.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} The more intricately decorated mosaics are found in four different rooms branching off from the peristyle courtyard paved with marble chips, with corridor mosaics utilizing [[amphora]] fragments.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=33–35}} In the center of one mosaic is the figure of Dionysos riding a leopard against a similar black background to the mosaic in the House of Dionysos.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} Another central mosaic features a flute player and a dancing figure, the latter perhaps representing [[Silenus]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} Only the Dionysos figure employs the ''vermiculatum'' method. The other mosaics of the house fail to achieve the [[Realism (arts)|naturalism]] of finer figure scenes and motifs, but they nevertheless demonstrate an attempt at mimicking their [[illusionist]] qualities with the tesselated technique.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Mosaic Panther 100 BC Museum Delos Zde13M154.jpg|A tiny [[mosaic]] of a [[Leopard|panther]] from the "House of the Masks" on [[Delos]], dated circa 100 BC
File:Delos Haus der Masken 06.jpg|[[Dionysos]] riding on a feline creature
File:Delos Haus der Masken 06.jpg|[[Dionysos]] riding on a feline creature
File:Delos Haus der Masken 08.jpg|A [[Silk Road|silk-clad figure]] dancing to the tune of a [[Music of ancient Greece|flute player]]
File:Delos Haus der Masken 08.jpg|A [[Silk Road|silk-clad figure]] dancing to the tune of a [[Music of ancient Greece|flute player]]
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The House of the Dolphins contains a peristyle floor mosaic design that is unusual for Delos, with a circle enclosed by a square outline.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} In each corner of the square are pairs of dolphins ridden by tiny winged figures bearing the emblems of various [[List of Greek mythological figures|Greek deities]], namely the [[thyrsus]], [[caduceus]], [[trident]], and one object that is missing due to damage.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} The circle contains a central rosette design surrounded by floral garlands and [[griffin]]s.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} The mosaic, signed by a certain [[Asclepiades of Arados|Asclepiades]] of [[Arados]] (in ancient [[Phoenicia]], now western [[Syria]]), is one of only two examples from Delos that bear a signature of the original artist.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}}
The House of the Dolphins contains a peristyle floor mosaic design that is unusual for Delos, with a circle enclosed by a square outline.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} In each corner of the square are pairs of dolphins ridden by tiny winged figures bearing the emblems of various [[List of Greek mythological figures|Greek deities]], namely the [[thyrsus]], [[caduceus]], [[trident]], and one object that is missing due to damage.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} The circle contains a central rosette design surrounded by floral garlands and [[griffin]]s.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}} The mosaic, signed by a certain [[Asclepiades of Arados|Asclepiades]] of [[Arados]] (in ancient [[Phoenicia]], now western [[Syria]]), is one of only two examples from Delos that bear a signature of the original artist.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=33}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Dolphins in Delos.JPG|Dolphins and riders next to bands of single-wave-pattern motifs
File:Dolphins in Delos.JPG|Dolphins and riders next to bands of single-wave-pattern motifs
File:Delos Haus der Delfine 03.jpg|Peristyle courtyard flanked by columns that surround a mosaic floor
File:Delos Haus der Delfine 03.jpg|Peristyle courtyard flanked by columns that surround a mosaic floor
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===House of the Lake===
===House of the Lake===
Similar to the design of the majority of Delian homes,{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=33}} the House of the Lake is an irregular-shaped home (as opposed to a rectangular or square floor plan), located near a sacred lake and inhabited from roughly 300 to 100 BC. The peristyle ''[[impluvium]]'' is decorated with a geometric-patterned motif around a central rosette, surrounded on all sides by monolithic columns in the [[Ionic style]].{{sfnp|Crane|Perseus Digital Library|}}
Similar to the design of the majority of Delian homes,{{sfnp|Tang|2005|p=33}} the House of the Lake is an irregular-shaped home (as opposed to a rectangular or square floor plan), located near a [[sacred lake]] and inhabited from roughly 300 to 100 BC. The peristyle ''[[impluvium]]'' is decorated with a geometric-patterned motif around a central rosette, surrounded on all sides by monolithic columns in the [[Ionic style]].{{sfnp|Crane|Perseus Digital Library|}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Delos Schmuck-Insula 04.jpg|An example of the single-wave-patterned border
File:Delos Schmuck-Insula 04.jpg|An example of the single-wave-patterned border
File:Delos Schmuck-Insula 03.jpg|Cube-pattern mosaic with the single-wave border
File:Delos Schmuck-Insula 03.jpg|Cube-pattern mosaic with the single-wave border
Line 142: Line 162:
The House of the Trident contains peristyle panels with the motif of a black dolphin situated around a red anchor and black tridents against a white background. The theme suggests that the owners of the house were somehow connected to [[Ancient maritime history|maritime pursuits]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=35, 306}} These simple, two-dimensional mosaics stand in contrast to the multicolored, finely detailed, three-dimensional Hellenistic mosaics of figures and motifs.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} They are perhaps comparable or even linked to the black-and-white pavement mosaics that appear in [[Roman Italy]] some decades later.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}}
The House of the Trident contains peristyle panels with the motif of a black dolphin situated around a red anchor and black tridents against a white background. The theme suggests that the owners of the house were somehow connected to [[Ancient maritime history|maritime pursuits]].{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|pp=35, 306}} These simple, two-dimensional mosaics stand in contrast to the multicolored, finely detailed, three-dimensional Hellenistic mosaics of figures and motifs.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}} They are perhaps comparable or even linked to the black-and-white pavement mosaics that appear in [[Roman Italy]] some decades later.{{sfnp|Dunbabin|1999|p=35}}


<gallery widths="230px" heights="230px" perrow="4">
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Delos Haus des Dreizacks 05.jpg|Mosaic decoration of a [[dolphin]] wrapped around an [[anchor]]
File:Delos Haus des Dreizacks 05.jpg|Mosaic decoration of a [[dolphin]] wrapped around an [[anchor]]
File:House of the Trident 02.jpg|A view of the courtyard with the floor mosaic
File:House of the Trident 02.jpg|A view of the courtyard with the floor mosaic
Line 151: Line 171:
* [[Archaeological Museum of Delos]]
* [[Archaeological Museum of Delos]]
* [[History of the Cyclades]]
* [[History of the Cyclades]]
*[[Byzantine Mosaics]]
* [[Byzantine mosaics]]
* [[Late Antique and medieval mosaics in Italy]]
* [[Late Antique and medieval mosaics in Italy]]
* [[Zeugma Mosaic Museum]]


==Notes==
==Notes==
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* {{citation|last=Bruno|first=Vincent, J.|title=Hellenistic Painting Techniques: The Evidence of the Delos Fragments|year=1985|series=Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition|volume=11|location=Leiden|publisher=[[E. J. Brill]]|isbn=978-90-04-07159-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=84EeAAAAIAAJ|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Bruno|first=Vincent, J.|title=Hellenistic Painting Techniques: The Evidence of the Delos Fragments|year=1985|series=Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition|volume=11|location=Leiden|publisher=[[E. J. Brill]]|isbn=978-90-04-07159-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=84EeAAAAIAAJ|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Chamoux|first=François|title=Hellenistic Civilization|translator=Michel Roussel|year=2002|orig-year=1981|location=Oxford|publisher=Blackwell|isbn=978-0-631-22242-2|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T1kr4YGTA2AC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Chamoux|first=François|title=Hellenistic Civilization|translator=Michel Roussel|year=2002|orig-year=1981|location=Oxford|publisher=Blackwell|isbn=978-0-631-22242-2|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T1kr4YGTA2AC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Crane|first=Gregory R.|title=Delos, House of the Lake (Building)|publisher=[[Perseus Digital Library]] (Tufts University)|url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/artifact?name=Delos%2C+House+of+the+Lake&object=Building|accessdate=17 July 2017|ref={{harvid|Crane|Perseus Digital Library}}|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Crane|first=Gregory R.|title=Delos, House of the Lake (Building)|publisher=[[Perseus Digital Library]] (Tufts University)|url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/artifact?name=Delos%2C+House+of+the+Lake&object=Building|access-date=17 July 2017|ref={{harvid|Crane|Perseus Digital Library}}|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Dunbabin|first=Katherine, M. D.|authorlink=Katherine Dunbabin|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Technique and Materials of Hellenistic Mosaics|date=July 1979|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=83|number=3|jstor=505057|doi=10.2307/505057|pages=265–277|postscript=.}} {{subscription}}
* {{citation|last=Dunbabin|first=Katherine, M. D.|author-link=Katherine Dunbabin|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Technique and Materials of Hellenistic Mosaics|date=July 1979|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=83|number=3|jstor=505057|doi=10.2307/505057|pages=265–277|s2cid=193097937 |postscript=.}} {{subscription required}}
* {{citation|last=Dunbabin|first=Katherine, M. D.|title=Mosaics of the Greek and Roman World|year=1999|location=Cambridge|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|isbn=978-0-521-00230-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U7Uu_Dq8oY4C|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Dunbabin|first=Katherine, M. D.|title=Mosaics of the Greek and Roman World|year=1999|location=Cambridge|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|isbn=978-0-521-00230-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U7Uu_Dq8oY4C|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Hachlili|first=Rachel|title=Ancient Mosaic Pavements: Themes, Issues, and Trends: Selected Studies|location=Leiden|publisher=E. J. Brill|year=2009|isbn=978-90-04-16754-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jxk0v1rWL1EC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Hachlili|first=Rachel|title=Ancient Mosaic Pavements: Themes, Issues, and Trends: Selected Studies|location=Leiden|publisher=E. J. Brill|year=2009|isbn=978-90-04-16754-4|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Jxk0v1rWL1EC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Hardiman|first=Craig I.|chapter=Classical Art to 221 BC|title=A Companion to Ancient Macedonia|pages=505–521|location=Oxford|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2010|isbn=978-1-4051-7936-2|chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/AncientMacedonia/Ancient%20Macedonia#page/n531/mode/2up| editor-given1 = Joseph | editor-surname1 = Roisman| editor-given2 = Ian | editor-surname2 = Worthington|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Hardiman|first=Craig I.|chapter=Classical Art to 221 BC|title=A Companion to Ancient Macedonia|pages=505–521|location=Oxford|publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|year=2010|isbn=978-1-4051-7936-2|chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/AncientMacedonia/Ancient%20Macedonia#page/n531/mode/2up| editor-given1 = Joseph | editor-surname1 = Roisman| editor-given2 = Ian | editor-surname2 = Worthington|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Joyce|first=Hetty|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Form, Function and Technique in the Pavements of Delos and Pompeii|date=July 1979|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=83|number=3|jstor=505056|doi=10.2307/505056|pages=253–263|postscript=.}} {{subscription}}
* {{citation|last=Joyce|first=Hetty|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Form, Function and Technique in the Pavements of Delos and Pompeii|date=July 1979|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=83|number=3|jstor=505056|doi=10.2307/505056|pages=253–263|s2cid=191394716 |postscript=.}} {{subscription required}}
* {{citation|last=Lebègue|first=Jacques Albert|chapter=|title=Recherches sur Délos|pages=|location=Paris|publisher=E. Thorin|year=1876|isbn=978-1167633836|url=https://archive.org/details/recherchessurdl01lebgoog/page/n11/mode/2up/search/Mosa%C3%AFque|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Lebègue|first=Jacques Albert|title=Recherches sur Délos|location=Paris|publisher=E. Thorin|year=1876|isbn=978-1167633836|url=https://archive.org/details/recherchessurdl01lebgoog/page/n11/mode/2up/search/Mosa%C3%AFque|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Tang|first=Birgit|title=Delos, Carthage, Ampurias: the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres|year=2005|location=Rome|publisher=L'Erma di Bretschneider (Accademia di Danimarca)|isbn=978-88-8265-305-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nw5eupvkvfEC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Tang|first=Birgit|title=Delos, Carthage, Ampurias: the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres|year=2005|location=Rome|publisher=L'Erma di Bretschneider (Accademia di Danimarca)|isbn=978-88-8265-305-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nw5eupvkvfEC|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=UNESCO|authorlink=UNESCO|title=Delos|publisher=|url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/530|accessdate=5 February 2020|ref={{harvid|UNESCO|}}|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=UNESCO|author-link=UNESCO|title=Delos|url=https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/530|access-date=5 February 2020|postscript=.}}
* {{citation|last=Westgate|first=Ruth|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Pavimenta atque emblemata vermiculata: Regional Styles in Hellenistic Mosaic and the First Mosaics at Pompeii|date=April 2000|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=104|number=2|jstor=507451|doi=10.2307/507451|pages=255–275|postscript=.|url=https://semanticscholar.org/paper/bbb6fc722004fb939cab9a726a2c229aa6b3103d}} {{subscription}}
* {{citation|last=Westgate|first=Ruth|journal=American Journal of Archaeology|title=Pavimenta atque emblemata vermiculata: Regional Styles in Hellenistic Mosaic and the First Mosaics at Pompeii|date=April 2000|publisher=Archaeological Institute of America|volume=104|number=2|jstor=507451|doi=10.2307/507451|pages=255–275|s2cid=194101486|postscript=.}} {{subscription required}}
* {{citation|last=Westgate|first=Ruth|journal=British School at Athens Studies|title=Life's rich pattern: decoration as evidence for room function in Hellenistic houses|year=2007|publisher=[[British School at Athens]]|volume=15|jstor=40960601|pages=313–321|postscript=.}} {{subscription}}
* {{citation|last=Westgate|first=Ruth|journal=British School at Athens Studies|title=Life's rich pattern: decoration as evidence for room function in Hellenistic houses|year=2007|publisher=[[British School at Athens]]|volume=15|jstor=40960601|pages=313–321|postscript=.}} {{subscription required}}


==External links==
==External links==
Line 178: Line 199:
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
* [http://ancient-greece.org/museum/delos.html Delos Archaeological Museum from Ancient-Greece.org]
* [http://ancient-greece.org/museum/delos.html Delos Archaeological Museum from Ancient-Greece.org]
* [http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/artifact?name=Delos%2C+House+of+the+Masks&object=Building "Delos, House of Masks (Building)]", [[Perseus Digital Library]] of [[Tufts University]]
* [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/artifact?name=Delos%2C+House+of+the+Masks&object=Building "Delos, House of Masks (Building)]", [[Perseus Digital Library]] of [[Tufts University]]
* [http://www.france24.com/en/20170802-archaeologists-unearth-little-pompeii-southeast-france Archaeologists unearth 'little Pompeii' in southeast France], ''[[France 24]]''
* [http://www.france24.com/en/20170802-archaeologists-unearth-little-pompeii-southeast-france Archaeologists unearth 'little Pompeii' in southeast France], ''[[France 24]]''


[[Category:Delos]]
{{Delos}}
{{Authority control}}

[[Category:1st-century BC paintings]]
[[Category:1876 archaeological discoveries]]
[[Category:Ancient Delos]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek mosaics]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek mosaics]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek art by region]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek art by region]]
[[Category:Hellenistic art]]
[[Category:Hellenistic art]]
[[Category:Archaeological discoveries in the Aegean Islands]]
[[Category:Tanit]]

Latest revision as of 11:23, 17 October 2024

A Hellenistic Greek mosaic depicting the god Dionysos as a winged daimon riding on a tiger,[1][2] from the House of Dionysos at Delos in the South Aegean region of Greece, late 2nd century BC, Archaeological Museum of Delos

The mosaics of Delos are a significant body of ancient Greek mosaic art. Most of the surviving mosaics from Delos, Greece, an island in the Cyclades, date to the last half of the 2nd century BC and early 1st century BC, during the Hellenistic period and beginning of the Roman period of Greece. Hellenistic mosaics were no longer produced after roughly 69 BC, due to warfare with the Kingdom of Pontus and the subsequently abrupt decline of the island's population and position as a major trading center. Among Hellenistic Greek archaeological sites, Delos contains one of the highest concentrations of surviving mosaic artworks. Approximately half of all surviving tessellated Greek mosaics from the Hellenistic period come from Delos.

The paved walkways of Delos range from simple pebble or chip-pavement constructions to elaborate mosaic floors composed of tesserae. Most motifs contain simple geometric patterns, while only a handful utilize the opus tessellatum and opus vermiculatum techniques to create lucid, naturalistic, and richly colored scenes and figures. Mosaics have been found in places of worship, public buildings, and private homes, the latter usually containing either an irregular-shaped floor plan or peristyle central courtyard.

Although there are minor traces of Punic-Phoenician and Romano-Italian influence, the Delian mosaics generally conform to the major trends found in Hellenistic art. The same wealthy patrons who commissioned paintings and sculptures at Delos may have also been involved in hiring mosaic artists from abroad. Delian mosaics share characteristics with those in other parts of the Greek world, such as Macedonian mosaics in Pella. They also bear some attributes with Greek painting traditions and often employ a similar black-background technique found in red-figure pottery of the Classical period. Some of the styles and techniques found at Delos are evident in Roman art and mosaics, although contemporary Roman examples from Pompeii, for instance, reveal significant differences in the production and design of mosaics in the western versus eastern Mediterranean.

Dating

[edit]
Left: King Lycurgus of Thrace killing Ambrosia, from the Northern Quarter of Delos,[3] Archaeological Museum of Delos
Right: a Delian mosaic with pigeons flocking around a bowl, Archaeological Museum of Delos

Archaeological excavations of Delos by the French School at Athens began in 1872,[4] with initial descriptions of the mosaics published in a report by French archaeologist Jacques Albert Lebègue in 1876.[5] Precisely 354 mosaics from Delos survive and have been studied by French archaeologist Philippe Bruneau.[2][6][7] Most date to the late Hellenistic period, contemporaneous with the late Roman Republic (i.e. the last half of the 2nd century BC and early 1st century BC).[2][6][8][9][10] A handful were dated to the Classical period,[6] with one mosaic attributed to the Imperial Roman era.[6] Bruneau believed that nominally undated pieces, on the basis of their styles, were produced within the same period as the majority of examples, roughly between 133 and 88 BC.[6]

In 167 or 166 BC, after the Roman victory in the Third Macedonian War, Rome ceded the island of Delos to the Athenians, who expelled most of the original inhabitants.[3] The Roman destruction of Corinth in 146 BC allowed Delos to at least partially assume the former's role as the premier trading center of Greece. Delos' commercial prosperity, construction activity, and population waned significantly after the island was assaulted by the forces of Mithridates VI of Pontus in 88 and 69 BC, during the Mithridatic Wars with Rome.[11] Despite the invasions by Pontus, the island was only gradually abandoned after Rome secured a more direct trading link with the Orient that marginalized Delos as a pivotal midway point for trade leading to the East.[12]

Characteristics

[edit]

Composition

[edit]

The composition of the Delos mosaics and pavements include simple pebble constructions, chip-pavement made of white marble, ceramic fragments, and pieces of tesserae.[2][6][13] The latter falls into two categories: the simpler, tessellated opus tessellatum using large pieces of tesserae, on average eight by eight millimeters,[14] and the finer opus vermiculatum using pieces of tesserae smaller than four by four millimeters.[2][6][15] Many Delian mosaics use a mixture of these materials, while chip pavement is the most common. The latter is found in 55 homes and usually reserved for the ground floor.[16] The majority of Delian mosaics comprise broken pieces of marble set into cement floors; other flooring bases are composed of either rammed earth or gneiss flagstones.[17] Pavements in kitchens and latrines were built with pottery, brick, and tile fragments for the purpose of waterproofing.[18] Thin strips of lead set into the cement are often used to distinguish the contours of geometric-patterned mosaics, but are absent in the more complex tessellated, figured mosaics.[19]

A cubic floor mosaic in a house on the island of Delos

Arrangement and location

[edit]

While some mosaics have been unearthed from religious sanctuaries and public buildings, most of them were found in residential buildings and private homes.[20] The majority of these houses possess an irregular-shaped floor plan, while the second largest group were built with a peristyle central courtyard.[21] Simple mosaics were usually relegated to normal walkways, whereas rooms designated for receiving guests featured more richly decorated mosaics.[22][23] However, only 25 houses of Delos feature opus tessellatum mosaics and only eight houses possess the opus vermiculatum-style motifs and figured scenes.[6][15] The vast majority of decorated floors feature only simple geometric patterns.[6] It is also more common for opus vermiculatum and opus tessellatum mosaics to be found in upstairs rooms than on the ground floors of ancient Delian homes.[24] With the exception of the House of Dionysos and House of the Dolphins, the courtyards of peristyle homes in Delos feature only floral and geometric motifs.[23]

A Delian mosaic bearing the central rosette motif surrounded by a single-wave border pattern[25]

Patterns and motifs

[edit]

Among the various patterns and motifs found in Delian mosaics is the triple-colored lozenge that creates a three-dimensional illusion of cubes in perspective for the viewer.[1][2] This pattern appears in fifteen different locations, making it one of the most common.[1] Other motifs include waves and stepped triangles, while major themes include maritime, theatrical, natural, or mythological objects and figures.[24] The single wave pattern, a common motif in Hellenistic art, is the most predominant type of border design for mosaics at Delos and can be found at other sites such as Arsameia (albeit arranged in the opposite direction).[14][26] The rosette motif, which is found in the mosaics of various Hellenistic sites across the Mediterranean, is often coupled with single-wave borders in Delian mosaics.[25] The typical Hellenistic palmette motif is used in a mosaic of Delos to fill the four corners around a central rosette motif.[27] The illusion of three-dimensional relief in the figured scenes of Delian mosaics was usually achieved by the use of polychrome, with white, black, yellow, red, blue and green hues.[14]

The origins of the composition, techniques, layout, and style of Delian mosaics can be found in 5th-century BC pebble mosaics of Olynthus in the Chalcidice of northern Greece, with mosaics positioned in the center of cement floors and utilizing garland, meander, and wave patterns around a centralized motif or figured scene.[28] This design scheme is similar to that of 4th-century BC mosaics of Pella in Macedonia, although the pebble mosaics there employ a wider range of colors to create the effects of volume.[29] The transition from pebble mosaics to more complex tessellated mosaics perhaps originated in Hellenistic-Greek Sicily during the 3rd century BC, developed at sites such as Morgantina and Syracuse.[29][30] Much like Olynthus, mosaics of Morgantina contain the garland, wave, and meander patterns, although the latter was finally executed with perspective.[29]

Culture and ethnic origins

[edit]

Aside from a symbol of the Punic-Phoenician goddess Tanit, all pavement motifs are typically Hellenistic Greek in origin, although some pavement mortars used with tesserae designs betray some Italian influence.[9] The three major ethnic groups of Delos included Greeks (largely of Athenian origin), Syrians/Phoenicians, and Italians/Romans, but it is very likely that many of these Italians were Italiotes, Greek-speaking natives of Magna Graecia in what is now southern Italy.[31] Delian inhabitants of either Greek, Italian, and Syrian origins owned mosaics in their private households, but Vincent J. Bruno asserts that the designs of their mosaic artworks were indebted entirely to Greek artistic traditions.[32]

Significance

[edit]
Delian mosaics with birds and foliage, c. 100 BC

The surviving corpus of Hellenistic mosaic art

[edit]

The French archaeologist François Chamoux considered the mosaics of Delos as the "high-water mark" and pinnacle of ancient Greek mosaic art utilizing tesserae to create rich, detailed and colorful scenes.[8] This Hellenistic style of mosaic continued until the end of Antiquity and may have influenced the widespread use of mosaics in the Western world during the Middle Ages.[8] In her study of the households and artworks of Mediterranean trading centers, Birgit Tang analyzed three archaeological sites: Delos in the Aegean, Carthage in what is now modern Tunisia, and Emporion, modern Empúries in Catalonia, Spain, which was once a Greek colony.[33] The reasons for her choosing these sites in particular for investigation and comparison include their status as major maritime trading hubs as well as their relatively well-preserved ruins of urban households.[34]

Ruth Westgate writes that Delos contains roughly half of all surviving tessellated Greek mosaics from the Hellenistic period.[35] In her estimation the sites of Delos and Morgantina and Soluntum in Sicily contain the largest amount of surviving evidence for Hellenistic Greek mosaics.[36] Hariclia Brecoulaki asserts that the Delos mosaics represent the single largest collection of Greek mosaics.[2] She also states that only the Macedonian capital of Pella ranks as an equal in having private homes (as opposed to royal residences) decorated with elaborate wall paintings, signed mosaics, and freestanding marble sculptures.[37] Katherine M. D. Dunbabin writes that while many Hellenistic mosaics have been found in mainland Greece, Asia Minor, and northeast Africa (i.e. Cyrene), it is only at the site of Delos where they occur in "sufficient numbers to allow general conclusions about their use and nature."[6]

Comparisons with Roman Pompeii

[edit]
Left image: detail of the face of Dionysos, from a mosaic in the House of Dionysos, Delos, Greece, late 2nd century BC
Right image: detail of Alexander the Great, from the Alexander Mosaic, House of the Faun, Pompeii, Italy, late 2nd or early 1st century BC

In her comparative analysis of mosaic art in the Greco-Roman world, Hetty Joyce chose the mosaics of Delos and Roman Pompeii as chief representative samples for determining distinctions in the form, function, and production techniques of mosaics in the Greek East and Latin West.[38] Her reasoning for the selection of these two sites are their well-preserved pavements, the secure dating of the samples to the late 2nd and early 1st centuries BC, and, thanks to the extensive documentation of Delian mosaics by Bruneau, a sufficient amount of academic literature dedicated to each site to form comparisons.[39] Ruth Westgate, in her survey and comparative study of Hellenistic Greek mosaics with mosaics of Pompeii, concludes that the Roman mosaics, dated to the Pompeian First Style of wall painting in the late 2nd and early 1st centuries BC, were derived from the Greek tradition.[40] However, she stresses that Pompeian mosaics departed from their Greek counterparts by almost exclusively featuring figured scenes instead of abstract designs, in plain pavement most likely set by local craftsmen and produced separately from the figured panels, the latter of which were perhaps made by Greek artisans for their Roman patrons.[41]

Due to the similarities between the Hellenistic wall paintings at Delos and the First Style of Pompeii, Joyce contends that the differences in Delian and Pompeian mosaics are the deliberate product of artistic preference rather than the result of ignorance of each other's traditions.[42] These differences include the widespread use of opus signinum at Pompeii, with only four known examples at Delos; the use of opus sectile at Pompeii and its complete absence at Delos; the prevalent use of polychrome patterns and intricate, three-dimensional figured designs in Delian mosaics versus two-dimensional designs at Pompeii, which at best utilize two colors.[43] Complex three-dimensional figured mosaics using polychrome designs to achieve the illusion of light and shadow were not produced at Pompeii until the Pompeian Second Style of wall painting (80–20 BC) and are considered an adoption from Hellenistic art trends.[44] While lead strips were used in Hellenistic mosaics of Delos, Athens, and Pella (Greece), Pergamon (Turkey), Callatis (Romania), Alexandria (Egypt), and Chersonesus (the Crimean peninsula), they are absent in Western Mediterranean mosaics of Malta, Sicily, and the Italian peninsula.[19] Westgate affirms that Hellenistic mosaics can be divided into two broad categories: eastern and western, based on their different styles and production techniques.[41]

Connections to other mediums of ancient Greek art

[edit]
Fragments of mural paintings from Delos, c. 100 BC

Red-figure pottery was no longer produced by the time the Delos mosaics were made. The black background technique of red-figure pottery was still appreciated in 4th-century-BC Macedonian pebble mosaics from Pella and in mosaics at Delos, such as the white-figured Triton mosaic with tesserae.[45] The black background technique was later used in glass art such as cameo glass, particularly Roman glass (e.g. Portland Vase, Gemma Augustea, Great Cameo of France, etc.).[45]

The undulating garland motif against a black background from the masonry-style mural paintings at Delos were earlier featured in Greek works ranging from vases to 4th-century-BC Macedonian mosaics of Pella, particularly the Stag Hunt Mosaic.[46] However, the painters of Delos arguably invented their own decorative genre using a combination of these older elements with new naturalistic coloring.[46] Aside from the black background, mosaics like the Stag Hunt Mosaic were also inspired by the illusionist, three-dimensional qualities of Greek paintings.[47] At Delos, paintings and mosaics inherited the same Classical Greek standards of craftsmanship, lighting, shading, and coloring.[32] Sculptors, painters, and mosaic artists may have all been part of the same system of patronage at Delos, which in some instances would have necessitated the importation of foreign artists.[48]

Houses and city quarters

[edit]

Mosaics from the Northern Quarter

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The northern quarter of Delos contains the Jewelry Quarter, where older structures such as workshops and other archaeological remains dating to the 3rd century BC and early 2nd century BC have been discovered.[49] By the second half of the 2nd century BC these were replaced by private homes built in the most characteristic fashion for Delos: a narrow, rectangular floor plan with a central courtyard, a vestibule service room in the front, and a larger, main room in the rear. The quarter of the House of the Masks is the only area of Delos without this archetypal house plan.[50] Some houses of the Northern Quarter feature mosaic decorations with mythological scenes, including Lycurgus of Thrace and Ambrosia in an upper-story mosaic, as well as Athena and Hermes together with a seated woman in a main-room mosaic.[24]

Mosaics from the Theatre Quarter

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Most houses in the crowded Theatre Quarter of Delos have irregular-shaped floor plans (such as trapezoidal designs), as opposed to square or rectangular designs.[51] The narrow and irregular street grid is unlike that of other quarters, where streets usually meet at approximately right angles.[52] Similar to the majority of excavated homes of Delos, those in the Theatre Quarter feature an open courtyard without porticoes, instead of the peristyle layout with columns.[53] Some of the houses in the Theatre Quarter lack interior decoration altogether, with neither wall murals nor mosaics, which is unusual for most Delian homes.[9]

House of Dionysos

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The Delos mosaic of Dionysos riding a tiger in the House of Dionysos is one of the finest examples of opus vermiculatum, according to Dunbabin, and is comparable to the Dionysos riding a leopard from the House of the Masks if not the simpler pebble-mosaic predecessor from the Macedonian capital at Pella.[1] A key thematic difference, however, are the wings of Dionysos that suggest his incarnation as a daimon instead of a god.[2][54] The tesserae materials, made of glass, faience, terracotta and natural stones, are fashioned into pieces measuring roughly one millimeter square, allowing for sharp detail and an elaborate color scheme.[2][54]

House of the Masks

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The House of the Masks is named after the mosaic motif of theatre masks decorating ivy scrolls arranged in strips around a central surface area decorated in a cubic pattern.[55] The more intricately decorated mosaics are found in four different rooms branching off from the peristyle courtyard paved with marble chips, with corridor mosaics utilizing amphora fragments.[56] In the center of one mosaic is the figure of Dionysos riding a leopard against a similar black background to the mosaic in the House of Dionysos.[55] Another central mosaic features a flute player and a dancing figure, the latter perhaps representing Silenus.[55] Only the Dionysos figure employs the vermiculatum method. The other mosaics of the house fail to achieve the naturalism of finer figure scenes and motifs, but they nevertheless demonstrate an attempt at mimicking their illusionist qualities with the tesselated technique.[55]

House of the Dolphins

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The House of the Dolphins contains a peristyle floor mosaic design that is unusual for Delos, with a circle enclosed by a square outline.[57] In each corner of the square are pairs of dolphins ridden by tiny winged figures bearing the emblems of various Greek deities, namely the thyrsus, caduceus, trident, and one object that is missing due to damage.[57] The circle contains a central rosette design surrounded by floral garlands and griffins.[57] The mosaic, signed by a certain Asclepiades of Arados (in ancient Phoenicia, now western Syria), is one of only two examples from Delos that bear a signature of the original artist.[57]

House of the Lake

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Similar to the design of the majority of Delian homes,[51] the House of the Lake is an irregular-shaped home (as opposed to a rectangular or square floor plan), located near a sacred lake and inhabited from roughly 300 to 100 BC. The peristyle impluvium is decorated with a geometric-patterned motif around a central rosette, surrounded on all sides by monolithic columns in the Ionic style.[58]

House of the Trident

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The House of the Trident contains peristyle panels with the motif of a black dolphin situated around a red anchor and black tridents against a white background. The theme suggests that the owners of the house were somehow connected to maritime pursuits.[59] These simple, two-dimensional mosaics stand in contrast to the multicolored, finely detailed, three-dimensional Hellenistic mosaics of figures and motifs.[55] They are perhaps comparable or even linked to the black-and-white pavement mosaics that appear in Roman Italy some decades later.[55]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Dunbabin (1999), p. 32.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Brecoulaki (2016), p. 678.
  3. ^ a b Tang (2005), p. 14.
  4. ^ UNESCO.
  5. ^ Lebègue (1876), pp. 130–131, 133, 134–135, 140.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Dunbabin (1999), p. 30.
  7. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 253, footnote #1.
  8. ^ a b c Chamoux (2002), p. 375.
  9. ^ a b c Tang (2005), p. 48.
  10. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 253, footnote #2; 255.
  11. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 14, 32.
  12. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 253, footnote #2.
  13. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 45, 47.
  14. ^ a b c Joyce (1979), p. 256.
  15. ^ a b Tang (2005), p. 45.
  16. ^ Tang (2005), p. 47.
  17. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 255.
  18. ^ Joyce (1979), pp. 255–256.
  19. ^ a b Joyce (1979), p. 258.
  20. ^ Dunbabin (1999), pp. 30–32.
  21. ^ Tang (2005), p. 40.
  22. ^ Dunbabin (1999), pp. 30–32, 306.
  23. ^ a b Tang (2005), pp. 46–47.
  24. ^ a b c Tang (2005), p. 46.
  25. ^ a b Hachlili (2009), pp. 9–10.
  26. ^ Hachlili (2009), p. 10.
  27. ^ Hachlili (2009), p. 11.
  28. ^ Joyce (1979), pp. 259–260.
  29. ^ a b c Joyce (1979), p. 260.
  30. ^ Dunbabin (1979), p. 265.
  31. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 14–15.
  32. ^ a b Bruno (1985), pp. 13–14.
  33. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 13–18.
  34. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 13–14.
  35. ^ Westgate (2000), pp. 255–256.
  36. ^ Westgate (2007), p. 313.
  37. ^ Brecoulaki (2016), pp. 673, 678.
  38. ^ Joyce (1979), pp. 253–263.
  39. ^ Joyce (1979), pp. 253–254.
  40. ^ Westgate (2000), pp. 255–275.
  41. ^ a b Westgate (2000), p. 255.
  42. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 254.
  43. ^ Joyce (1979), pp. 256–257.
  44. ^ Joyce (1979), p. 257.
  45. ^ a b Bruno (1985), p. 31.
  46. ^ a b Bruno (1985), p. 21.
  47. ^ Hardiman (2010), p. 518.
  48. ^ Bruno (1985), pp. 12–13.
  49. ^ Tang (2005), p. 32.
  50. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 40–41.
  51. ^ a b Tang (2005), p. 33.
  52. ^ Tang (2005), p. 31.
  53. ^ Tang (2005), pp. 33–34.
  54. ^ a b Dunbabin (1999), pp. 32–33.
  55. ^ a b c d e f Dunbabin (1999), p. 35.
  56. ^ Dunbabin (1999), pp. 33–35.
  57. ^ a b c d Dunbabin (1999), p. 33.
  58. ^ Crane & Perseus Digital Library.
  59. ^ Dunbabin (1999), pp. 35, 306.

References

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  • Brecoulaki, Hariclia (2016), "Greek Interior Decoration: Materials and Technology in the Art of Cosmesis and Display", in Irby, Georgia L. (ed.), A Companion to Science, Technology, and Medicine in Ancient Greece and Rome, Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World, vol. 1, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 672–692, ISBN 978-1-118-37267-8.
  • Bruno, Vincent, J. (1985), Hellenistic Painting Techniques: The Evidence of the Delos Fragments, Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition, vol. 11, Leiden: E. J. Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-07159-9.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Chamoux, François (2002) [1981], Hellenistic Civilization, translated by Michel Roussel, Oxford: Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-631-22242-2.
  • Crane, Gregory R., Delos, House of the Lake (Building), Perseus Digital Library (Tufts University), retrieved 17 July 2017.
  • Dunbabin, Katherine, M. D. (July 1979), "Technique and Materials of Hellenistic Mosaics", American Journal of Archaeology, 83 (3), Archaeological Institute of America: 265–277, doi:10.2307/505057, JSTOR 505057, S2CID 193097937.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (subscription required)
  • Dunbabin, Katherine, M. D. (1999), Mosaics of the Greek and Roman World, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-00230-1.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Hachlili, Rachel (2009), Ancient Mosaic Pavements: Themes, Issues, and Trends: Selected Studies, Leiden: E. J. Brill, ISBN 978-90-04-16754-4.
  • Hardiman, Craig I. (2010), "Classical Art to 221 BC", in Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Macedonia, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 505–521, ISBN 978-1-4051-7936-2.
  • Joyce, Hetty (July 1979), "Form, Function and Technique in the Pavements of Delos and Pompeii", American Journal of Archaeology, 83 (3), Archaeological Institute of America: 253–263, doi:10.2307/505056, JSTOR 505056, S2CID 191394716. (subscription required)
  • Lebègue, Jacques Albert (1876), Recherches sur Délos, Paris: E. Thorin, ISBN 978-1167633836.
  • Tang, Birgit (2005), Delos, Carthage, Ampurias: the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres, Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider (Accademia di Danimarca), ISBN 978-88-8265-305-7.
  • UNESCO, Delos, retrieved 5 February 2020.
  • Westgate, Ruth (April 2000), "Pavimenta atque emblemata vermiculata: Regional Styles in Hellenistic Mosaic and the First Mosaics at Pompeii", American Journal of Archaeology, 104 (2), Archaeological Institute of America: 255–275, doi:10.2307/507451, JSTOR 507451, S2CID 194101486. (subscription required)
  • Westgate, Ruth (2007), "Life's rich pattern: decoration as evidence for room function in Hellenistic houses", British School at Athens Studies, 15, British School at Athens: 313–321, JSTOR 40960601. (subscription required)
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