Apollo Magazine (UK)

78 Fabio Barry, Painting in Stone: Architectu­re and the Poetics of Marble from Antiquity to the Enlightenm­ent, by Adriano Aymonino

A vast overview of the history of marble in architectu­re shimmers with detail, writes Adriano Aymonino

- Adriano Aymonino is senior lecturer in art history at the University of Buckingham.

Painting in Stone: Architectu­re and the Poetics of Marble from Antiquity to the Enlightenm­ent

Fabio Barry

Yale University Press, £50

ISBN 9780300248­166

When Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny’s Taste and the Antique was first published in

, Ernst Gombrich’s review of it for the London Review of Books opened with this laconic statement: ‘Here, at last, is a book of which we can sincerely say in the old phrase that it meets a long-felt want’. The same is true for Fabio Barry’s Painting in Stone, a tour de force of erudition and interpreta­tion in the field of cultural history that will have a long-lasting legacy.

In an age of creeping commodific­ation of the humanities and of academic hyper-specialisa­tion, Barry’s book is a welcome arrival, clearly the synthesis of research conducted over the course of an entire career. The historical and geographic­al breadth of Painting in Stone is daunting, as it traces the use of marbles and other stones throughout Western and Middle Eastern architectu­re, from the ziggurats of Mesopotami­a to the baroque chapels of southern Europe.

The primary merit of this book is to offer to an English-speaking readership a vast overview of a subject that has been so far presented mostly in specialise­d academic publicatio­ns, often in Italian or German. Previous comprehens­ive studies, such as Raniero Gnoli’s seminal Marmora Romana ( ), tended to focus on the materialit­y of the marbles, and specifical­ly antique Roman coloured marbles, stressing their historical role as expression of conspicuou­s consumptio­n and display of power.

Barry’s approach is much more ambitious, going beyond the social and political spheres to look at the symbolic values of marbles. They are treated primarily as media capable of evoking symbolical­ly or metonymica­lly the divine on earth, the metaphysic­al sphere becoming physical substance. For millennia, before the age of quantitati­ve science, marbles – and the most colourful or glittering materials – were interprete­d as the gleaming reflection­s of the heavens. They were infused with radiant power to transport the beholder from ‘the slime of the earth’ to the ‘higher world’, to quote Abbot Suger; and that idea, we are reminded, refers back to shared concepts as

old as sedentary civilisati­on itself. The book ends just before the age of the Enlightenm­ent, when the mystical aura of marbles began to fade when exposed to the cold light of ‘Reason’ and to the sharp analytical tools of nascent geology and chemistry.

Barry provides the reader with the eyes and the mindset of the pre-modern beholder, when the ‘Great Chain of Being’ linked all things in the universe, from God down to minerals, and connection­s were establishe­d mainly on the basis of physical and visual qualities. Barry embraces an immense range of material and literary sources; this book is as much a study of language as it is a history of architectu­ral media. Although the author’s mastery of technical aspects is impressive, marbles and stones are read primarily through the evocative lenses of geological, cosmologic­al and religious texts, and the even more imaginativ­e prism of poetry. Thankfully Barry’s style inhabits the same linguistic spheres.

New and illuminati­ng meaning is found by examining the etymology of words and the rhetorical convention­s used in the descriptio­n of marbles. For example, it is revealing to discover that the Latin word for marble, marmor, comes from the Greek verb marmairein, meaning ‘to glisten’, whose Sanskrit root, mar-mar, indicates the lapping of waves. This relates to the Greek and Roman belief that marble was of essentiall­y watery origin and was constantly ‘sweated out’ by mountains through their breaches. The presence of marine fossils further encouraged the belief that certain stones were ultimately petrified water. The same conception lies behind the cosmic watery floors of striped Proconnesi­an marble in Byzantine churches, such as Hagia Sophia or San Marco, which were meant to evoke the world’s watery genesis and the fact that God’s throne sat ‘above the waters’.

Barry’s multidisci­plinary perspectiv­e on materials yields fresh insights into many aspects of Western architectu­re and art. We discover, for instance, that the familiar Judeo-Christian vision of a heaven made of precious stones and gems has its physical origins in the multicolou­red ziggurats of Babylon. Or that fresco, a medium in which the pigments are in the wall, not on it, was devised by Minoan craftsmen precisely to imitate coloured stone. Equally revealing is to read that the bright white of Parian, Pentelic or Luna marble was possibly more important and dense with symbolic associatio­ns than the coloured pigments applied on many antique statues and buildings. We are also reminded that early Renaissanc­e Venice had the upper hand over Florence or Rome in terms of ‘marble revival’. The reader finds intriguing new interpreta­tions of specific key buildings, from the Erechtheio­n in Athens to the Porta Marina Domus in Ostia (Fig. 3) to Hagia Sophia in Istanbul (Fig. 2) – the star of the central part of the book – to Santa Maria dei Miracoli in Venice (Fig. 1) and Bernini’s Cornaro Chapel. Many similar examples dot the book’s pages.

For a volume that on its dust jacket displays a tabernacle made of reused antique Roman coloured marbles and a Cosmatesqu­e floor there is, however, surprising­ly little mention of either. Often found in the latter, the porphyry roundels, or rotae porphyreti­cae, which constitute­d the most symbolical­ly charged employment of the most symbolic of all stones, are discussed only once, for instance, and in relation not to a late antique building, but to the Renaissanc­e chapel of the Cardinal of Portugal in the Florentine church of San Miniato al Monte. But no doubt those rich seams have been thoroughly mined by previous scholars; a book of this scope is necessaril­y bound to omit something.

The inattentiv­e reader may well get lost in time, space and meaning in Painting in Stone, and in the book’s multiplici­ty of citations – there is perhaps too much in its pages. But this history of the ‘lithic imaginatio­n’ will certainly provide food for thought for a wide range of specialist­s for years to come, and will reframe the way in which we look at Western and Middle Eastern architectu­re and art.

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 ??  ?? 1. The facade of Santa Maria dei Miracoli, Venice, by Pietro Lombardo and others, built 1481–87 and clad in 10 varieties of marble
1. The facade of Santa Maria dei Miracoli, Venice, by Pietro Lombardo and others, built 1481–87 and clad in 10 varieties of marble
 ??  ?? 2. The North Gallery of Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, with ‘accordion’ style book-matched marble slabs on the far wall
2. The North Gallery of Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, with ‘accordion’ style book-matched marble slabs on the far wall
 ??  ?? 3. Wall panel in opus sectile, c. 394, from a Roman house outside the Porta Marina, Ostia. Museo dell’Alto Medioevo, Rome
3. Wall panel in opus sectile, c. 394, from a Roman house outside the Porta Marina, Ostia. Museo dell’Alto Medioevo, Rome

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