Back to gallery

Roman fresco with a Nilotic scene

In a scene set on the banks of the Nile River in Egypt, a crocodile moves through a cluster of rushes and sneaks up on a small figure rowing a boat beside a thatched hut and a scraggly palm tree. In the background is an impressionistic rendering of a bridge and a colonnaded portico supporting various buildings in Greco-Roman architectural style. The remains of a red border are preserved at the top and bottom of the fragment, and an additional, darker stripe along the bottom edge may have been the frame of another scene below.

 

During the first and second centuries AD, Nilotic scenes appear often in Roman frescoes and mosaics in a variety of contexts, mostly in domestic settings but also in public baths, temples, and tombs. These landscapes sometimes portray Egypt’s inhabitants as the pygmies (pygmaioi) of Greek myth: dwarf-like people who were believed to live in far-away lands, such as Ethiopia (not to be confused with the actual African people of the Congo once given this name). Roman viewers could have assigned various meanings to the presence of pygmies in Nilotic scenes, depending on their context. They may have called to mind Egyptian dwarf gods like Bes, who served an apotropaic function; alluded to the fertility-granting powers of Egyptian deities; played a role in Roman “othering” of Egypt and Egyptians; expressed the cultural sophistication and worldliness of the homeowner; or served as comedic satire. Nilotic imagery could also evoke associations with fertility in connection with the river’s annual flooding. It is possible that the figure rowing the boat in this fresco fragment is a pygmy, lending the scene a marvelous quality and representing Egypt as a land of mystery.

 

Roman, AD 1-79. Probably from the Vesuvian area, most likely from Pompeii.

 

Tempera on plaster (fresco)

 

Getty Villa Museum (72.AG.86)

1,370 views
12 faves
1 comment
Uploaded on February 19, 2024
Taken on June 15, 2023