Abstract:
The term “Grotesque” is used as a general adjective for everything strange,
fantastic, ugly, incongruous, unpleasant, or disgusting, thus it is also used to
describe the weird shapes. Main objects of architectural decoration of this kind
are vignettes and fantastic monsters, consisting of human, vegetal and zoomorphic
elements, and sometimes architectural details too. An immense variety of
motifs and figures, hybridity and metamorphosis is one of the most typical
characteristics of the decorative style.
The word itself is originally from Italian grottesco, literally “of a cave”
(from Italian grotto), which is an extravagant style of Antique Roman decorative
art rediscovered and then copied in Renaissance at the end of the 15th
century. The word first was used for the paintings found on the walls of basements
of Roman ruins that were called at that time Le Grotte. That Grotte were
the halls of splendid DomusAurea, the unfinished palace complex of Emperor
Nero, built after the Great Fire of Rome in 64, which was demolished during
the rule of Emperor Trajan.
Such designs were very fashionable in Rome starting from the times of
Augustus (Villa Livia, Villa Farnesina etc.) as fresco or stucco wall decoration
and floor mosaics, but they were hardly criticized by Vitruvius (30 B.C.) as
illogical, meaningless art, purely decorative, without sense and narration, great
ideas and heroes: “reeds are substituted for columns, fluted appendages with
curly leaves and volutes take the place of pediments, candelabra support representations
of shrines, and on top of their roofs grow slender stalks and volutes
with human figures senselessly seated upon them.”
After discovering of Domus Aurea, the Grotesque became very
fashionable in Renaissance art too, thanks to the artworks of Raphael and his
school, especially of Giovanni da Udine (Villa Madama and Villa Farnesina in
Rome, loggias of Apostolic Palace in Vatican) forming the special variation of
this style – Raphaelesque Grotesque. Starting from that times till the beginning
of the 20th century in fact any European villa, luxurious city residence or palace
has the decoration, somehow relative to the Grotesque style. In our article we try to discover some forms of Medieval fine arts, including
also Georgian samples (frescoes and reliefs, manuscripts illuminations)
relative to Grotesques. According to this, we can analyze also the wide and
complicated problem: how the heritage of Antiquity – the iconographical schemes
and stylistic moments, pagan gods and mythological creatures – survives in
the Middle Ages both in Eastern and Western Christendoms.