Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Ancient graffiti
In ancient times the term graffiti referred to figure drawings, wall carvings and inscriptions found on ancient ruins, throughout Pompeii, and within the Catacombs of Rome. The word evolved to include artistic vandalism. The first known example of ‘modern’ graffiti exists in the Ephesus, an ancient Greek city that is now Turkey. The graffiti conveys a ‘for a good time’ sign which appears near a long mosaic stone walkway. The sign includes a heart shape, a footprint, handprints, and a numbers. The hands represented how much the ‘good time’ would cost, and the foot shows how many steps it would take to find the lover. Pompeii is a Roman city that depicts many examples of graffiti art – you’ll find, in Latin graffiti, magic instructions, insults, love declarations, signs for political campaigns, caricatures, and quotations from literature. Ancient graffiti is also found in Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli, in the Mayan site of Tikal in Guatemala, Viking graffiti in Rome, and vandalism art in Ireland at Newgrange Mound.
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