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Cultural heritage to preserve and re-appropriate

THE BEST KEPT SECRET

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Even though ancient polychromy is a fact of history, for centuries archeologists and museum curators have been scrubbing away these traces of color before presenting statues and architectural reliefs to the general public. Furthermore, most museums and art history textbooks contain predominantly neon white displays of skin tone when it comes to classical statues and sarcophagi. And most exhibitions of ancient sculpture and architecture do not include any reference to rich pigments that used to cover their surfaces.

Marco Leona, who runs the scientific-research department at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, has called Ancient polychromy the "best kept secret that is not even a secret" of western art history, fueled by material and scholarly omission. 

This omission has had critical consequences for the perception of what should be considered within the Western canon of art. Additionally, the willful ignorance of classical polychromy has also affected the perception of who can own, or not, the cultural heritage of classical ancient sculpture.

In the widely read The New Yorker article The Myth of Whiteness in Classical Sculpture, professor of ancient art at the University of Georgia, Mark Abbe, shared that the idea that the ancients disdained bright color “is the most common misconception about Western aesthetics in the history of Western art.” It is “a lie we all hold dear.

The variety of colors in Ancient sculpture and art was not only decorative. It also reflected the colorful variety of daily life in the ancient Roman empire. The Fayum Portraits, for example, are a remarkable trove of naturalistic paintings from the imperial Roman province of Egypt, which are among the few paintings on wood that survive from that period. These near-life-size portraits, which were painted on funerary objects, present their subjects with an array of skin tones, from olive green to deep brown, testifying to a complex intermingling of Greek, Roman, and local Egyptian populations.

See above, for example, the power of color in the Fayum Portraits of Emperor Septimius Severus and his wife Julia Domna. The Fayum Portrait of the couple is a critical example of the importance of including color in historical and artistic representations of Ancient figures. In the monochrome marble statues, it is not easy to get a hint of the Emperor's North African origin (he was born in Leptis Magna, Tripolitania, now in Libya), and of his wife's Syrian origin (she was born in Emesa, now Homs, Syria, to a family of Arab descent).

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