Abstract

Archaeometric studies on mosaics often concentrate only on glass tesserae, while comprehensive studies including both stone and glass tesserae are scarce; however, both types of tesserae can sometimes bring relevant data to elaborate archaeological knowledge on a studied mosaic. In this paper, a representative set of tesserae from a large polychrome Roman mosaic retrieved in Barcelona (NE Spain) is investigated using various methods. Most of the techniques were directly applied on samples prepared as petrographic thin sections (including polarized-light, cathodoluminescence and electron microscopies, and synchrotron through-the-substrate μX-ray diffraction). The results indicate that, from the ten sampled stone tesserae, there are (i) seven limestones, one of them identified as Alveolina limestone (early Eocene) from the southern Pyrenees (ii) two sandstones from Barcelona’s Montjuïc hill (Miocene) and, (iii) a Carrara white marble from the Apuan Alps (Italy). The profuse presence of tesserae of both local and imported materials with well-known uses in architecture, epigraphy, and sculpture could imply that tesserae were a by-product of their main use. Two different production technologies were identified for the three sampled glass tesserae. The concurrent use of antimony- and tin-based opacifiers is in agreement with the accepted archaeological chronology of the mosaic (4th century AD).

Highlights

  • The taste for polychromy in ancient art assumed by many artistic expressions, includes floors, painted walls, and sculptures or the use of colorful stones or painted architectural elements

  • As with many other artistic and architectural changes, mosaics were implemented by the Romans over the Hellenistic civilization influence, who turned it into an art genre of significant scale

  • We report the results of an archaeometric investigation on a representative set of tesserae from a large polychrome Roman mosaic retrieved in Barcelona

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Summary

Introduction

The taste for polychromy in ancient art assumed by many artistic expressions, includes floors, painted walls, and sculptures or the use of colorful stones or painted architectural elements. It is possible that mosaics are the best elements to analyze the richness of the kaleidoscopic decoration in the Classic world because some of them show a wide and condensed palette of colors without significant fading through time. As with many other artistic and architectural changes, mosaics were implemented by the Romans over the Hellenistic civilization influence, who turned it into an art genre of significant scale. Decorative mosaics likely originated as an indigenous development in Greece [1], a variation of decorated pebble floors. Bichrome (black-and-white) and polychrome mosaics often attempted to copy the geometrical motives of contemporary wall paintings and some figurative mosaics are known to be copies of original paintings

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