A new exhibition will celebrate Roman art's obsession with sex in the ill-fated city of Pompeii.
The works will be shown at the Pompeii Archaeological Park starting on April 14.
The eroticism in the works will pay homage to the discovery of a mosaic depicting Priapus, the fertility god, weighing his penis on a scale which allowed discoverers to unearth Pompeii's ruins in the 1900s.
An erotic fresco found at Pompeii, dating from approximately the 1st century A.D. and preserved at the National Archaeological Museum of Naples
A fresco portraying Ares and Aphrodite from Casa di Marte e Venere (House of Mars and Venus) in Pompeii
A fresco with an erotic subject depicting a Dionysian scene, from Pompeii
RELATED ARTICLES
- They came, they saw, they cheated: Metal detectorist finds... Plenty of history, wonderful views... might need a bit of...
Share this article
ShareThe city had been buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD79.
Gabriel Zuchtriegel, the site director, told the Times: 'Eroticism was everywhere, in houses, baths and public spaces thanks to the influence of the Greeks, whose art heavily featured nudity.
The images of phalluses were thought to bring wealth and fertility to families in the city.
Pompeiian fresco showing a satyr and a maenad embracing from the House of Cecilio Giocondo, Italy
Exhibits will include a chariot decorated with metal medallions of satyrs, nymphs and cupids, wall panels depicted various sex positions and a fresco from a villa of a similar scene.
When the King of Naples visited Pompeii, he ordered the phalluses to be covered.
He then made a decree that they could only be viewed by mature individuals in an act of prudishness.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pa3IpbCmmZmhe6S7ja6iaKaVrMBwrdGtoJyklWJ%2BcYGRcmxyb192u6S1xKerZoqforK0ecWaqpyhnpbBqrvNZqWunJmpxm64zq%2BcppmbnruoecKeo56aopbBprCMnq%2BhoZKewaq7zWefraWc