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Pinacotheca
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A pinacotheca (Latin borrowing from Ancient Greek: πινακοθήκη, romanized: pinakothēkē = πίναξ, pinax, '(painted) board, tablet' + θήκη, thēkē, 'box, chest') was a picture gallery in either ancient Greece or ancient Rome. The name is specifically used for the building containing pictures which formed the left wing of the Propylaea on the Acropolis at Athens, Greece. Though Pausanias speaks of the pictures "which time had not effaced",[1] which seems to point to fresco painting, the fact that there is no trace of preparation for stucco on the walls implies that the paintings were easel pictures. The Romans adopted the term for the room in a private house containing pictures, statues, and other works of art.
In the modern world the word is often used as a name for a public art gallery concentrating on paintings, mostly in Italy (as "Pinacoteca"), such as the Pinacoteca Vaticana of the Vatican Museums (which is usually meant when the plain word is used), the Pinacoteca di Brera in Milan (more often "the Brera" informally), the Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli built on the roof of the former Lingotto Fiat factory in Turin, Italy, with others in Bologna and Siena. In Brazil, there is the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo. In Paris, the Pinacothèque de Paris. In Munich the three main galleries are called the Alte Pinakothek (old masters), Neue Pinakothek (19th century) and Pinakothek der Moderne. The Pinacotheca, Melbourne, was a gallery for avant-garde art from 1967 to 2002. At Hallbergmoos, near Munich Airport, there was the Pinakothek Hallbergmoos (20th and 21st century) between 2010 and 2014.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pinacotheca". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 616.
- ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece, book I, chapter xxii, page 31, section 6, translated by J. G. Frazer (1898)
Pinacotheca
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Etymology
The term "pinacotheca" derives from the Ancient Greek πινακοθήκη (pinakothḗkē), a compound word consisting of πίναξ (pínax), meaning "painted tablet," "board," or "picture," and θήκη (thḗkē), meaning "case," "chest," or "repository."[4] The element πίναξ is a native Greek term of Proto-Indo-European origin, cognate with Sanskrit pínāka ("staff" or "stick"), reflecting its basic sense of a flat wooden or plastered surface used for writing or painting. Meanwhile, θήκη stems from the verb τίθημι (títhēmi, "to place" or "to put"), indicating a container or storage space. Modern scholars apply the term to ancient Greek buildings housing pictures, such as the one described by Pausanias in his Description of Greece (2nd century CE) as "a building with pictures" on the left side of the Propylaea on the Athenian Acropolis (1.22.6).[5] Though the exact term πινακοθήκη does not appear in surviving classical texts, it is inferred from the function of such spaces dedicated to displaying painted panels or images in ancient Greek contexts. The concept of picture galleries was adopted in ancient Rome for rooms in private villas and public buildings housing art objects, tablets, and statues, later termed pinacotheca by scholars.[1] During the Renaissance, scholarly revival of classical terms led to variations such as pinacoteca, the Italianized form influenced by medieval and Byzantine Greek transmissions, which gained prominence in European art discourse for naming collections of paintings.[6] This spelling evolution reflects the term's adaptation from archaic Latin-English pinacotheca to the more common modern European pinacoteca, particularly in Italian contexts.[7]Definition and Usage
A pinacotheca, derived from the Greek term pinakotheke (πινακοθήκη), refers to a dedicated repository or gallery specifically designed for the display of panel paintings known as pinakes, which were wooden boards painted with images. Modern scholars use the term to describe ancient structures focused on two-dimensional artworks, such as easel or wall-mounted paintings, rather than three-dimensional sculptures or other artifacts commonly housed in temples or sanctuaries. Based on classical descriptions, such as Pausanias', these spaces featured scenes from mythology, history, or daily life executed in tempera or encaustic techniques.[8] Functionally, these galleries served as venues for public or elite audiences to engage with artworks that conveyed historical narratives, mythological tales, or commemorative events, frequently aligning with educational aims or political propaganda to reinforce cultural identity and civic values. These galleries facilitated communal appreciation of artistic skill, allowing viewers to contemplate the technical mastery of painters like Polygnotus or Apollodorus, whose works adorned similar spaces. In Roman adaptations, the concept extended to private villas, where such rooms curated collections for personal edification or social display, as noted in classical texts describing rooms filled with venerable panels.[9] Unlike a museum—a broader institution encompassing diverse objects for study and preservation—or a stoa, a colonnaded walkway serving multiple public functions like commerce and discourse, the pinacotheca prioritized the exhibition of flat, displayable artworks, often detachable panels that could be rearranged or admired in sequence. This emphasis on pictorial content set it apart from sculpture-centric venues, highlighting the cultural value placed on painting as a narrative medium in antiquity.[8] Over time, the meaning of pinacotheca evolved from ancient public exhibition halls to contemporary art institutions retaining the nomenclature for collections centered on paintings, reflecting a continuity in the focus on pictorial heritage. In the Renaissance revival and beyond, the term influenced the naming of European galleries dedicated to easel paintings, adapting the classical model to modern curatorial practices while preserving its core association with visual art display.[10]History
Origins in Ancient Greece
The origins of the pinacotheca trace back to classical Greek society in the 5th century BCE, emerging as dedicated spaces for displaying panel paintings within public and sacred architecture. The term derives from the Greek words pinax (πίναξ), meaning "board" or "painted tablet," and theke (θήκη), meaning "repository" or "case," reflecting its function as a gallery for wooden panel artworks.[4] These structures represented a novel integration of art into civic life, coinciding with advancements in painting techniques that allowed for larger, more narrative-driven compositions on portable panels rather than solely on pottery or walls. The earliest known pinacotheca was incorporated into the Propylaea, the monumental gateway to the Athens Acropolis, constructed between approximately 437 and 432 BCE under the direction of Pericles as part of his grand building program.[11] Located in the north wing of the Propylaea, this chamber housed large-scale panel paintings that honored the gods and commemorated military victories, serving as a prestigious showcase for Athens' artistic and imperial achievements. The construction was interrupted by the onset of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BCE, leaving the structure incomplete but functional for its artistic purpose.[11] This development was closely linked to the rise of monumental panel painting during the 5th century BCE, a period when artists pioneered more expressive and spatially aware techniques, moving beyond archaic styles toward classical realism. Prominent painters such as Polygnotus of Thasos and Mikon of Athens contributed iconic works, including depictions of Trojan War episodes like the sacrifice of Polyxena and the battle of Marathon, which exemplified the era's focus on heroic myths and historical triumphs.[12] These panels, often executed in encaustic or tempera on wood, elevated painting to a status rivaling sculpture, with Polygnotus credited for innovations in figure grouping and emotional depth.[12] Pinacothecas functioned as vital public venues in democratic Athens, promoting civic pride, collective memory, and education through accessible displays of cultural heritage. Visitors, including citizens and travelers, engaged with the artworks as part of rituals or tours of the Acropolis, fostering a sense of communal identity and imperial glory. The 2nd-century CE traveler Pausanias provides key evidence of these viewing practices, describing specific scenes in the Propylaea pinacotheca—such as Odysseus taking the bow of Philoctetes on Lemnos and the sacrifice of Polyxena near the tomb of Achilles, along with a portrait of Alcibiades—that drew audiences to reflect on epic narratives.[5] The pinacotheca's prominence was deeply embedded in the Age of Pericles (ca. 461–429 BCE), when Athens channeled resources from the Delian League—its alliance of Greek city-states—to fund cultural projects that symbolized hegemony and piety. Thucydides notes that these tribute funds, averaging 600 talents annually, supported extensive public works on the Acropolis, including artistic installations that glorified Athena and Athenian prowess.[13] However, the structure's role diminished after Athens' defeat in the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BCE), amid political upheaval, economic strain, and reduced state patronage for large-scale art, leading to a broader decline in such public displays during the late classical period.[14]Adoption in Ancient Rome
The adoption of the pinacotheca concept in ancient Rome occurred during the late Republic, particularly from the 2nd century BCE, as Roman elites encountered and appropriated Greek art through Hellenistic conquests.[15] This integration was exemplified by Marcus Claudius Marcellus, who after the capture of Syracuse in 212 BCE, first displayed Greek paintings and sculptures publicly in Rome, marking an early adaptation of the Greek model for housing artworks.[15] Pliny the Elder, in his Natural History (completed around 77 CE), describes Roman pinacothecas as spaces filled with valuable paintings, including old Greek tablets and foreign images, often prized more for their cost than their subjects.[16] Key developments saw the pinacotheca expand into both private elite collections and public venues, serving as repositories for looted Greek art that symbolized wealth and cultural conquest. In private settings, such as elite villas in Pompeii, these galleries became integral to domestic architecture, displaying paintings and statues to impress visitors and assert social status among the Roman aristocracy.[17] Vitruvius, writing in the late 1st century BCE, recommended designing pinacothecas as large, north-facing rooms adjacent to libraries or peristyles, to provide even, cool light that preserved the vibrancy of the artworks.[18] Publicly, they appeared in forums and porticos, where generals like Lucius Mummius (after Corinth in 146 BCE) and others dedicated spoils from Achaia, Asia, and Macedonia to temples and civic spaces, enhancing Rome's urban landscape with galleries of conquered art.[15] Under the Empire, pinacothecas played a role in imperial propaganda, integrating art into monumental architecture to glorify rulers. The Porticus of Pompey, constructed in 55 BCE in the Campus Martius, housed numerous paintings from eastern conquests, including works by Greek artists like Polygnotus, creating a shaded promenade that doubled as a public art gallery.[19] Augustus further advanced this by installing paintings in his Forum Augustum, such as depictions of Bellum, Triumphus, Castor, and Victoria, using these displays to link his regime to Roman victories and divine favor.[20] These imperial examples transformed the pinacotheca from a Greek import into a tool for political messaging, with artworks often sourced from provincial tributes. The prominence of pinacothecas waned with the decline of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century CE, as economic instability and invasions disrupted elite collecting and public patronage.[15]Revival in the Renaissance and Modern Era
During the Italian Renaissance, the concept of the pinacotheca experienced a revival through humanist scholars' engagement with classical texts, notably Pliny the Elder's Natural History (ca. 77 CE), which detailed ancient Greek and Roman picture galleries as spaces for displaying paintings and sculptures. This rediscovery in the 15th century fueled a renewed appreciation for art collecting as a cultural pursuit, influencing prominent patrons like the Medici family in Florence, whose private assemblages of Renaissance masterpieces—housed in palaces such as the Palazzo Medici Riccardi—served as precursors to organized galleries and emphasized art's role in intellectual and civic life.[21][22] By the 19th century, the pinacotheca evolved into a formalized institution within public museums, particularly amid the Napoleonic era's reorganizations of artistic patrimony. Napoleon I established the Pinacoteca di Brera in Milan in 1809, transforming an existing academy collection into a national gallery enriched by artworks confiscated from religious institutions and looted during campaigns, thereby creating accessible repositories for Italian heritage. This development aligned with Enlightenment principles of art as a tool for public education and moral improvement, as seen in the emphasis on didactic displays that promoted aesthetic appreciation and national identity across emerging European museums.[23][24][25] In the 20th century, the pinacotheca adapted to avant-garde contexts and post-war recovery efforts. The Pinacotheca gallery in Melbourne, founded in 1967 by Bruce Pollard, championed experimental and post-object art by emerging Australian artists, operating as a cooperative hub for conceptual works.[26] In Europe, the term endured through cultural reconstruction following World War II, exemplified by the rebuilding of the Alte Pinakothek in Munich (1952–1957), where architect Hans Döllgast integrated war-damaged remnants with modern elements to restore a Baroque-era gallery as a symbol of resilience and continuity in artistic preservation.[27] Today, over 50 pinacoteche operate across Italy, from the Pinacoteca di Brera to regional institutions like the Pinacoteca Nazionale in Bologna and Siena, where curatorial practices merge reverence for historical collections with contemporary exhibitions and digital access to foster ongoing public engagement with visual arts.Architecture and Design
Structural Features
Pinacothecas were characterized by rectangular chambers or wings specifically adapted for the exhibition of paintings, often executed on wooden panels known as pinakes that could be hung or affixed to walls. In ancient Greek examples, such as the Pinakotheke forming the north wing of the Propylaea on the Acropolis in Athens, the structure comprised a main chamber approximately 11 meters by 9 meters, accessed via an anteroom, with interior walls designed to support the display of large-scale artworks depicting mythological and historical subjects. The walls featured a low marble socle, orthostates, and a string course of isodomic ashlar blocks, crowned by relief cornices, providing a stable framework for mounting panels. Above the string course, the upper zones were finished in polychrome stucco imitating ashlar masonry, creating framed panels and relief elements that served as a neutral backdrop for the paintings while enhancing visual clarity.[11][28][29] Roman pinacothecas, integrated into elite villas, followed a similar rectangular layout but emphasized flexibility for easel paintings and movable displays, often in dedicated gallery rooms adjoining the atrium. These spaces utilized plain or minimally decorated walls with niches, rails, or hooks for suspending works, avoiding the pedestals common in sculpture galleries to prioritize vertical wall space. Materials typically included stucco interiors over brick or stone cores, with marble revetments on select surfaces for durability and aesthetic appeal, allowing for the weight-bearing of heavy wooden panels through reinforced timber beams in ceilings and upper walls. Scale varied from compact villa annexes around 10 to 20 meters in length to more expansive public or palatial halls, accommodating both intimate viewings and larger collections. Ventilation was facilitated by adjacent colonnades or semi-open designs in Roman versions, promoting airflow while protecting artworks from direct environmental exposure.[30][31][1]Integration with Public Spaces
In ancient Greece, pinacothecas were often integrated as adjuncts to sacred sites, enhancing their role in civic and religious life. The most prominent example is the Pinakotheke on the Acropolis of Athens, located in the north wing of the Propylaea, the monumental gateway leading to the sanctuary. This placement allowed for processional viewing during festivals such as the Panathenaea, where participants and spectators passed through the central entrance, affording glimpses of the gallery's paintings honoring the gods and depicting Athens' mythical history.[11] In Roman urban planning, pinacothecas evolved into more accessible public features, embedded within forums, basilicas, and porticoed enclosures to facilitate elite and general circulation. Structures like the Porticus Pompeiana, the first public park in Rome, incorporated painting collections alongside gardens and sculptures, enabling free public viewing without entry fees and serving as multifunctional civic spaces. Pliny the Elder describes such porticoes as adorned with series of paintings, transforming them into de facto galleries that promoted communal engagement in art amid daily urban activities.[32][12] The strategic positioning of pinacothecas near agoras, temples, and gateways underscored their symbolic role in signifying cultural prestige for city-states and empires. In Greece, proximity to sacred precincts like the Acropolis elevated the galleries as emblems of divine favor and communal identity, while in Rome, integration into forum complexes near temples reinforced imperial patronage and civic pride. This architectural choice highlighted art's function in bolstering social cohesion and authority.[11][33] Accessibility features in ancient pinacothecas favored open layouts tied to public rituals, permitting fluid circulation during festivals or in porticoed areas and promoting spontaneous public interaction.[11][34]Notable Examples
Ancient Instances
The Pinacotheca in the Propylaea of Athens, constructed between 437 and 432 BCE under architect Mnesicles as part of the Periclean building program, represents one of the earliest attested public picture galleries in ancient Greece. Located in the north wing, this spacious chamber with an anteroom housed several large-scale panel paintings by renowned artists, including at least seven described by Pausanias depicting subjects such as the Trojan War (e.g., Diomedes taking the Athena from Troy), Odyssey scenes (e.g., Odysseus and the Sirens), and Athenian historical events (e.g., the battle of Marathon).[11][35][5] Archaeological evidence from the structure's preserved foundations and doorways confirms dedicated display spaces, distinct from banquet functions, with ancient accounts by Pausanias noting the exhibition of such works.Modern Institutions
The Alte Pinakothek in Munich stands as one of the world's premier repositories for Old Master paintings, founded in 1836 under the patronage of King Ludwig I of Bavaria to showcase the Bavarian State Painting Collections.[36] Housed in a neoclassical structure designed by Leo von Klenze, it features over 700 works spanning the 14th to 18th centuries, with particular emphasis on Northern European art, including major pieces by Albrecht Dürer such as his Self-Portrait at 28 and an extensive Rubens room containing 72 paintings, the largest permanent collection of the Flemish master's works worldwide.[36] The museum suffered severe bomb damage during World War II, leading to a meticulous postwar reconstruction completed in 1957 that preserved its original architectural intent while enhancing conservation facilities for the collection.[37] In Milan, the Pinacoteca di Brera exemplifies the integration of artistic heritage with educational institutions, officially established in 1809 as part of Napoleon's reorganization of Italian cultural assets, drawing from suppressed religious orders and French conquests to form a core collection of Italian art.[23] Located within the historic Palazzo Brera complex alongside the Accademia di Belle Arti, it prioritizes Renaissance masterpieces, notably Raphael's Marriage of the Virgin (1504), which highlights the gallery's role in displaying pivotal works from the 13th to 20th centuries, alongside pieces by Bellini, Mantegna, and Caravaggio.[38] This integration fosters ongoing scholarly engagement, with the pinacoteca serving as both a public museum and an academic resource since its inception.[39] The Vatican Pinacoteca, inaugurated on October 27, 1932, by Pope Pius XI, represents a dedicated space for the Holy See's pictorial treasures, constructed in a modern facility by architect Luca Beltrami to better protect and display paintings acquired over centuries from papal collections.[40] Spanning 18 themed rooms organized chronologically, it encompasses around 460 works from the 11th to 19th centuries, including significant holdings of Italian art such as Caravaggio's dramatic Deposition from the Cross (1603–1604), which exemplifies the gallery's focus on religious and historical themes by masters like Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, and Perugino.[41] The 1932 building addressed prior conservation challenges by providing climate-controlled environments, ensuring the longevity of these artifacts central to Vatican cultural patrimony.[40] Pinacotheca in Melbourne emerged as a vital hub for avant-garde expression in Australia, founded in 1967 by curator Bruce Pollard in a modest St Kilda space before relocating to a larger Richmond warehouse, where it championed experimental and minimalist works by emerging local talents alongside international innovators through the 1970s.[42] From 1967 to 1981, the gallery prioritized contemporary Australian artists like Robert Hunter and Dale Hickey, while introducing boundary-pushing exhibitions of conceptual and performance art that challenged mainstream conventions, fostering a community-driven alternative to established institutions.[43] Its closure in 1981 stemmed from persistent funding shortages amid economic pressures on independent art spaces, marking the end of a transformative era for experimental art in Melbourne.[44]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/pinacoteca