
Roman art usually showed images of emperors, gods, and goddesses, and familiar people. The Romans did not have perfect human shapes in their art. In some of their sculptures, they would have people with long noses. The Greeks, who only sculpted perfect human bodies, would never have done that. Romans had four styles paintings that sort of tricked the eye. The first style was when they painted walls to look like they were made of marble or copies of Greek styles of decoration. A second style was when they painted realistic. That looked like views through the window. The third method of tricking the eye was of combining styles. The Romans made paint brushes, and paint out of many natural materials.
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Romans had a couple forms of art. They had murals, large wall paintings, friezes, and portraits. Many emperors had murals on their walls of their palace. Another type of art that the Romans loved was architecture. In many buildings they would put friezes or decorated the columns that the building had. The Triumphal Arch of Tibias had arches and columns of different shapes and sizes. The statues were looked life as if they were real life like and of gods, goddesses, emperors, and important people. Portraits were usually statues that are just the head of the emperor’s shoulders. They also had other types of form such as paintings, poetry, tombstones, domes, and vaults.
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Roman art as a type of its own. Around 500 BC is when it started with the beginning of the Roman Republic. Romans were particularly interested in portraits. Making statues that really looked like one person, most commonly a famous person. Greek people were more interested in ideals. Not like the Greeks with perfect bodies. But the Romans were more interested the more real person.
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Another type of art that Romans focused on was architecture and mosaics. Even though the roman mosaics were very beautiful, if you compare them to Italian ones the Romans ones were still were still simpler and the technique was not as good. And the roman mosaics were also usually gods or goddesses. The Romans also developed a style in the 6th centenary. The round arch and the basilica characterize it.
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Paint brushes were made from twigs, wood, reeds, or rushes. Shaped wood or ivory was used for writing. Paints were made from ground rocks and powdered plants. Red and yellow came from ochre. White came from chalk. Green came from green soil, and black was from soot. Blue was a mixture of copper and glass. But purple was made from a special seashell.
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Glancey, Jonathan. Architecture. DK publishing inc: 2006
Dr. Paul,C. Roberts. Ancient Rome. Fog City Press: 2003




