Roman Spectres explores ancient Roman identity and how contemporary societies have conceptualised the ancient Roman world. The exhibition brings together significant Roman portraiture of the Nicholson Collection with large ceramic vessels (amphorae), funerary inscriptions and Pompeiian frescoes as individual touchstones to the lives of named and unnamed Roman people. Underlying themes of death, commemoration, remembrance and discovery underpin each section of the exhibition. The objects selected for display were chosen in order to highlight the role of these particular material types in academic constructions of historical narratives. Roman Spectres also includes a LEGO recreation of Pompeii, with three different narratives woven togethe...
Architectural depictions are an important window into crucial conceptual connections between archite...
Exhibition Notes, Number 13, 2001. This gallery guide has been created to accompany the exhibition ...
This thesis develops the concept of aegyptiaca as a framework for interpreting both Egyptian objects...
Ellen Perry is a co-editor. In recent decades, the study of Roman art has shifted focus dramaticall...
The intention of the exhibition Memento: Remembering Roman Lives is exactly that—to remember the pe...
Pompeii is a Roman city which has left a lasting imprint despite the passing of time. This paper dis...
This is a significant exhibition in that it presents the Greek material from the Nicholson Museum co...
Tokens are underutilised artefacts from the ancient world, but as everyday objects they were key in ...
This dissertation explores the creation and reception of the decorative assemblages displayed in Rom...
Marice Rose is a contributing author, Body/Culture: Display and Reception of the Farnese Hercules, ...
The focus of the paper is on the travel scene depicted on the funerary stele of L. Blassius Nigellio...
Roman sculpture of the late republic and empire is characterized by wide-ranging practices of formal...
Ancient Roman mosaics have much to offer the modern viewer. This thesis takes into account modern ar...
In this book, the author uses design theory, previously neglected in Roman archaeology, to investiga...
Approaches to domestic space and daily life in the Roman world commonly focus on a single type of ev...
Architectural depictions are an important window into crucial conceptual connections between archite...
Exhibition Notes, Number 13, 2001. This gallery guide has been created to accompany the exhibition ...
This thesis develops the concept of aegyptiaca as a framework for interpreting both Egyptian objects...
Ellen Perry is a co-editor. In recent decades, the study of Roman art has shifted focus dramaticall...
The intention of the exhibition Memento: Remembering Roman Lives is exactly that—to remember the pe...
Pompeii is a Roman city which has left a lasting imprint despite the passing of time. This paper dis...
This is a significant exhibition in that it presents the Greek material from the Nicholson Museum co...
Tokens are underutilised artefacts from the ancient world, but as everyday objects they were key in ...
This dissertation explores the creation and reception of the decorative assemblages displayed in Rom...
Marice Rose is a contributing author, Body/Culture: Display and Reception of the Farnese Hercules, ...
The focus of the paper is on the travel scene depicted on the funerary stele of L. Blassius Nigellio...
Roman sculpture of the late republic and empire is characterized by wide-ranging practices of formal...
Ancient Roman mosaics have much to offer the modern viewer. This thesis takes into account modern ar...
In this book, the author uses design theory, previously neglected in Roman archaeology, to investiga...
Approaches to domestic space and daily life in the Roman world commonly focus on a single type of ev...
Architectural depictions are an important window into crucial conceptual connections between archite...
Exhibition Notes, Number 13, 2001. This gallery guide has been created to accompany the exhibition ...
This thesis develops the concept of aegyptiaca as a framework for interpreting both Egyptian objects...