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Mostra Augustea della Romanità

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Mostra Augustea della Romanità
NameMostra Augustea della Romanità
LocationRome
Date1930–1937
CuratorGiovanni Gentile; Cesare Maria De Vecchi; Baldassarre Boncompagni Ludovisi
VenuePalazzo delle Esposizioni; Foro Italico
TypeArchaeological and propagandistic exhibition

Mostra Augustea della Romanità was a large-scale series of exhibitions staged in Rome between 1937 and 1938 that sought to present the art, architecture, and institutions of Ancient Rome through a curated narrative linked to contemporary Kingdom of Italy and Italian Fascism. Conceived as part of the cultural politics of Benito Mussolini's regime, the project mobilized archaeologists, architects, and artists to display antiquities and reconstructions alongside modern monuments such as the Foro Mussolini and the Via dei Fori Imperiali. The exhibitions combined scholarly display with overt political symbolism, intersecting with international events like the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne and national initiatives such as the Mostra della Rivoluzione Fascista.

Background and conception

The exhibitions emerged from collaboration among officials in the Ministry of National Education, curators from the Museo Nazionale Romano, and architects associated with the Istituto Nazionale di Urbanistica. Influences included earlier displays at the British Museum and the Louvre, the archaeological campaigns at Pompeii and Herculaneum, and intellectual currents represented by figures like Giovanni Gentile and Giorgio de Chirico. Political patronage by Galeazzo Ciano and intellectual framing by proponents of Romanità tied the shows to ideological projects promoted within institutions such as the Accademia dei Lincei and the Opera Nazionale Balilla. Planning drew on typological methods used in exhibitions at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts and conservation practices from the Soviet Union and Germany.

Exhibition design and layout

Design teams led by architects trained in the Novecento Italiano movement and planners from the Istituto Luce developed immersive galleries, outdoor displays, and monumental processional routes. Installations used comparative juxtapositions between artifacts from the Palatine Hill, casts from the Capitoline Museums, epigraphic panels from the Museo Epigrafico, and reconstructions inspired by the Forma Urbis Romae. Lighting and scenography drew on innovations by Gio Ponti and set designers from the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma. The layout connected indoor halls at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni with open-air tableaux near the Foro Italico and along the Via dei Fori Imperiali, creating a narrative promenade akin to processions in Imperial Rome and civic displays such as the Triumphal arch reconstructions seen at the Colosseum restorations.

Key artifacts and highlights

Highlights included bronze statuary attributed to workshop traditions represented in finds from Ostia Antica, marble portrait heads linking the iconography of Augustus and the Julio-Claudian dynasty, and mosaics from Ravenna and Alto Lazio. The exhibition showcased epigraphic material related to the Lex Iulia and architectural fragments referencing the Temple of Mars Ultor, the Ara Pacis Augustae casts, and scale models of the Circus Maximus and Imperial Fora. Important loans and transfers involved collections from the Vatican Museums, the Capitoline Museums, the National Archaeological Museum of Naples, and provincial museums in Sicily and Calabria. Curatorial essays and didactic panels incorporated comparative references to Alexander the Great portraiture, Hellenistic sculpture, and Roman engineering feats exemplified in the Pont du Gard and the Aqua Claudia aqueduct.

Themes and interpretive framework

Curators framed the displays around themes of continuity, civic virtue, and imperial authority, drawing parallels between Augustus's restoration of the res publica and contemporary narratives of national renewal promoted by Fascist Italy. Interpretive texts invoked Roman law exemplars such as the Twelve Tables and administrative models traced to the Cursus honorum, linking them rhetorically to modern legal codifications like the Codice Rocco. Artistic rhetoric emphasized classicizing aesthetics associated with Fascist architecture and the revivalist discourse seen in the work of Marcello Piacentini and monumental programs such as the EUR. The exhibition also staged discomforting juxtapositions, for example contrasting republican representations with imperial propaganda artifacts tied to figures like Nero and Domitian.

Public reception and impact

Contemporary press coverage in outlets such as Il Popolo d'Italia, Corriere della Sera, and international journals like The Burlington Magazine praised the exhibitions' scale while some scholars in United Kingdom and United States critiqued the politicization of archaeological interpretation. Attendance figures reflected mass mobilization through organizations like the Opera Nazionale Balilla and official delegations from Axis powers and neutral states. The shows influenced museum practices by foregrounding theatrical display, cross-institutional loans, and the production of catalogues and guides used by institutions including the Italian Touring Club and academic departments at the University of Rome La Sapienza.

Legacy and subsequent exhibitions

The exhibitions left a contested legacy: they accelerated conservation projects at sites such as the Roman Forum and funded cataloguing efforts at the Soprintendenza Archeologia. Postwar curators at the Museo Nazionale Romano and the Vatican Museums reassessed display strategies, leading to later thematic exhibitions about Imperial iconography and retrospective studies by scholars in the American Academy in Rome and the British School at Rome. Subsequent major exhibitions referencing the project include retrospectives on Augustus and themed displays at the Capitoline Museums and the National Roman Museum, prompting continued debate over the intersections of archaeology, nationalism, and public history.

Category:Exhibitions in Rome