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Say what? Roman statues weren’t actually white?

Carolin Teufelberger
2.3.2023
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

Smooth marble. Rock-hard six-pack. Small penis. Bright white. This is what most of us imagine when we hear «ancient statue». And most of it’s correct. The images of Greek and Roman youths were indeed carved from marble, fit and naked – but they were also colourful.

In just four minutes, I learned that Greek sculptures were colourful. Very colourful, in fact. They had brown hair, red lips, yellow dresses with blue embellishments and gold earrings. Or colourful plaid pants that’d make any old hippie green with envy. A blue-white Greece? Nope!

The enlighteners wanted to set themselves apart

People in the Renaissance also held on to this idea when the Laocoön group (now held in the Vatican) was excavated in 1503 and showed clear traces of paint. It was easier to talk yourself out of this fact or reinterpret it than to rethink your whole value system.

Except, of course, to the great fascist dictators of the 20th century. Mussolini and Hitler regarded the white marble figures with their toned torsos as proof of the superiority of the Aryan race. (People truly will clutch at straws in an attempt to justify crude ideologies.)

Reconstructions have been possible for some years thanks to UV light

The fact that the myth of the white sculptures from antiquity has held up for so long relies on two aspects. First, an honest misjudgment, as the colour had long since faded from many of the sculptures that had been dug up. Second, explicit denial, because colourful art didn’t fit a given worldview.

Header image: Study on the colour of the Treu Head, Photo: Liebighaus Skulpturenmuseum

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