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"... color traces were still visible in 1833..."<br>
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Mortimer Wheeler - "Roman Art and Architecture" (Thames & Hudson - 1964)<br>
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Anyone knows which is the source that Wheeler refers? <p></p><i></i>
Btw, there's an exhibition in the Glyptothek of Munich about the way Greek & Roman statues, reliefs and busts once looked when their color was still visible.<br>
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<img src="http://www.nw-news.de/Bilder/NW/gross/20040110/1820430000-1.jpg" style="border:0;"/><br>
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<img src="http://home.nexgo.de/berzelmayr/hadrian.gif"/> Est vita misero longa, felici brevis.<br>
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I have always felt that Romans and Greeks were much gaudier than usually depicted but !!!! Just checking- is this a spoof? <p></p><i></i>
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My eyes! I am blind! <p></p><i></i>
That's awesome. <p></p><i></i>
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I can't help thinking that the green looks a lot like verdigree. Other colours are definitely in the minority here. Presumably the helmet depicted was made of copper alloy. Could they have found the oxidised colour attractive and encouraged it?<br>
Other colours could then be used sparingly to break up the solid green appearance.<br>
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Just a thought. Btw, does anyone know how much a copper alloy helmet would be weakened by the encouragement of verdigree on the helmet?<br>
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Crispvs <p></p><i></i>
Who is called \'\'Paul\'\' by no-one other than his wife, parents and brothers. :!: <img src="{SMILIES_PATH}/icon_exclaim.gif" alt=":!:" title="Exclamation" />:!:
<a class="postlink" href="http://www.romanarmy.net">www.romanarmy.net
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I believe this is accurate, for unbeknownst to the researchers, a wooden crest box would have been glued to the sculpted helmet, just as it would a real helmet, and you can see a `blank' area where it was affixed. I doubt the helmet was intended to be green but the bronze powder in the paint, there to give it a metallic hue, (just as in some modern metallic paints of today), oxidized that color.<br>
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Now tht it works, lets try it on Trajan's column and other imperial military sculptures!<br>
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Dan <p></p><i></i>
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I love it, finely a good exhibition about the roman colors. A shame it is so fa away. Is there a cataloge.<br>
T vivid colouring has been known by archaeologists for decates. These very lively and horrible colors were used on all roman monuments, thriumphal arches, temples, pillars, etc, statuettes and even on the very tiny statuettes tat were found in graves. Last but not least, a lot of cloth was in these colours, can you image it.They must have had headaches all day just looking at it.<br>
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Arpvar <p></p><i></i>
Are these the *actual* colors that they used, as they would have appeared back in Roman times? It seems to me that they are a bit overstated, and in actual fact the colors would be a bit more subtle. At least with age, the elements would have made the statues seem more worn and make the colors more lifelike. Then again, I could be wrong, and the Roman world was gaudy enough to make even Carson from Queer Eye for the Straight Guy shudder.. <p></p><i></i>