Exhibition of Pompeii’s sex scenes aims to decode erotica

As art found among ruins goes on display, site’s director says ancient life was just as complex as our own

An exhibition of erotic art found among the ruins of Pompeii will aim to show inquiring minds that racy scenes were present in homes across all sections of society and public spaces and that the images were not looked on in a scandalous or embarrassing way.

About 70 relics, including two medallions decorated with images of satyrs and nymphs that came from a ceremonial chariot found at the site last year, will be on display at Pompeii’s archeological park from 21 April.

In addition, visitors will be able to tour the site, guided by an app, to check out homes along the Via del Vesuvio containing sexual frescoes, including one found in 2018 depicting the god of fertility, Priapus, weighing his manhood on a scale, and another showing the scene of the figure of Leda being impregnated by the Roman god Jupiter, disguised as a swan, that was discovered in 2019.

“Obviously, rich people’s homes had more paintings but [erotic images] were really very common in Pompeii,” said Gabriel Zuchtriegel, the director of Pompeii archaeological park. “Much had to do with how the Romans used Greek culture as a cultural code, as a lot of the art reflects Greek myth and stories taken from Greek traditions.”

Art showing couples in explicit sex scenes has been found in excavated homes, similar to those revealed in the brothels of the ancient Roman city, which was buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79. “Scholars have tended to interpret any rooms decorated with these scenes as some kind of brothel,” said Zuchtriegel. “But there was also space for prostitution inside homes.”

A man and woman in an erotic pose!
An erotic fresco in Pompeii s Lupanar, the ruins of an ancient brothel. Photograph: Mario Laporta/AFP/Getty

Experts have often interpreted sexual wall paintings in the brothels as a menu of the services on offer. “It looks a bit like this as you have scenes above each single door, but it is always very risky to make this kind of simplification,” added Zuchtriegel. “The ancient daily life was just as complex as our own, and it’s risky to reconstruct what happened in these places just by judging from the images.”

The exhibition will also feature art depicting homoerotic scenes, and includes a statue found in Casa del Bracciale d’oro, or House of the Gold Bracelet, one of Pompeii’s richest homes, representing a young man who would have served his master during banquets, as well as sexually.

“People look at the erotic images of Pompeii and see liberation but they also had written and unwritten rules, and it wasn’t actually this world of great liberty,” said Zuchtriegel. “Take homosexuality … it was certainly tolerated but that does not mean it offered the kind of participation and acceptance that we today are maybe wishing for.”

The exhibition runs until 15 January 2023.

Contributor

Angela Giuffrida in Rome

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Italy's new ruins: heritage sites being lost to neglect and looting
Overgrown and weathered, many historical monuments are disappearing as public funds for culture fail to match modern Italy’s inheritance

Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo

28, May, 2019 @11:56 AM

Article image
‘It’s as if we found oil’: Tuscan town savours discovery of spa trove
San Casciano dei Bagni’s fortunes expected to change after opulent Etruscan-Roman sanctuary found

Angela Giuffrida in San Casciano dei Bagni

11, Nov, 2022 @2:56 PM

Article image
Huge Atlas statue to guard Sicily's Temple of Zeus once more
Eight-metre statue built in 5th century BC had been buried among ancient ruins

Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo

14, Jul, 2020 @5:46 PM

Article image
Erotic fresco depicting Greek myth unveiled in Pompeii
Well-preserved image of Leda and the swan was found during excavations last year

Angela Giuffrida in Rome

25, Nov, 2019 @1:21 PM

Article image
US woman returns ancient Roman marble with letter of apology
Museum receives package from woman seeking forgiveness over graffitied artefact

Angela Giuffrida in Rome

25, Nov, 2020 @1:50 PM

Article image
Pompeii's new director: 'Excavation is always a kind of destruction'
Archaeologist Gabriel Zuchtriegel takes controversy in his stride as he develops programme for site

Angela Giuffrida in Rome

26, Feb, 2021 @12:57 PM

Article image
Saving Italy's cultural heritage by modern means
In lieu of state cash, culture minister Dario Franceschini is turning to crowdfunding and tax breaks to save Italy’s treasures – and beat heritage thieves

Rosie Scammell

19, Mar, 2015 @5:31 PM

Article image
Lavish ancient Roman winery found at ruins of Villa of the Quintilii near Rome
Excavation shows facility included luxurious dining rooms with views of fountains that gushed with wine

Charlotte Higgins in Rome

17, Apr, 2023 @4:00 AM

Article image
Pompeii’s fast food joint unearthed in 2019 opens to public
Frescoed relic frozen by ash from Vesuvius eruption reveals snack bar used by poor residents of Roman city

Angela Giuffrida

09, Aug, 2021 @12:46 PM

Article image
Police seize 19,000 stolen artefacts in international art trafficking crackdown
101 suspects arrested and rare cultural treasures recovered in huge global investigation

Sam Jones in Madrid

07, May, 2020 @10:09 AM