In the 18th century a marble bust representing the Minotaur was housed in Palazzo Barberini near the Quattro Fontane. It was subsequently bought and restored by Bartolomeo Cavaceppi and finally ended up in the Vatican Museums. On the basis of inventories it is possible to establish its provenance from Villa Barberini to Castel Gandolfo, which stood above the ruins of the Albanum Domitiani. Housed in the antiquarium of the present-day papal villa is the torso of a youth, a copy from an original whose replicas have already been interpreted as parts of groups from the Flavian age representing the myth of the Minotaur (Athens, Rome). Is it possible, with these two fragments, to reconstruct a similar group in the villa of Domitian? The struggle between Theseus and the Minotaur appears to
have been a subject particularly admired by Domitian, who in the Domus Flavia had a fountain built in the form of a labyrinth, at whose centre a group of the same subject may be hypothesized (a similar motif alluding to imperial power was used in the palace of Galerius at Gamzigrad). In Domitian propaganda a number of factors seem to support the choice of the archetypal image of the labyrinth and of Theseus as an exemplary hero: the resurgence of analogous Augustean symbols, Alexandrian models, allusions to the Athens acropolis and its patron goddess. It is therefore possible to propose the existence of a parallel between Domitian and Theseus – both favourites of Athena, the goddess of Metis, both presented as civilizing heroes, both seeking the reappropriation and legitimization of power that had initially been denied them.
have been a subject particularly admired by Domitian, who in the Domus Flavia had a fountain built in the form of a labyrinth, at whose centre a group of the same subject may be hypothesized (a similar motif alluding to imperial power was used in the palace of Galerius at Gamzigrad). In Domitian propaganda a number of factors seem to support the choice of the archetypal image of the labyrinth and of Theseus as an exemplary hero: the resurgence of analogous Augustean symbols, Alexandrian models, allusions to the Athens acropolis and its patron goddess. It is therefore possible to propose the existence of a parallel between Domitian and Theseus – both favourites of Athena, the goddess of Metis, both presented as civilizing heroes, both seeking the reappropriation and legitimization of power that had initially been denied them.
Index
Licia Luschi
A sculpture of Theseus and the Minotaur from the Albanum Domitiani. Origin and dispersion of the Barberini antiquities
read abstract » pag. 2-24
read abstract » pag. 2-24
Fiorella Sricchia Santoro
Painting in Naples in the years of Ferrante and Alfonso duke of Calabria. In the footsteps of Costanzo de Moysis and Polito del Donzello
read abstract » pag. 25-107
read abstract » pag. 25-107
Irene Sbrilli
Sante del '700; Apollonio del Celandro and Pinturicchio in the workshop of Bartolomeo Caporali
read abstract » pag. 110-131
read abstract » pag. 110-131
Gabriele Fattorini
Lorenzo Marrina, Domenico Beccafumi and the tomb monument of the rector Giovanni Battista Tondi for the church of the hospital of Santa Maria della Scala in Siena
read abstract » pag. 132-159
read abstract » pag. 132-159
Alessandra Giannotti
Sebastiano Serlio, Niccolò Tribolo and the legacy of Baldassarre Peruzzi: the altar of Madonna di Galliera in Bologna
read abstract » pag. 174-196
read abstract » pag. 174-196