June 22, 2010
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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At least, I hope I'm right in assuming this comes from the collection of [[Pompeian erotica]]. | At least, I hope I'm right in assuming this comes from the collection of [[Pompeian erotica]]. | ||
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- | By the [[1750s]] the [[Grand Tour]] was focused on the [[excavation]]s at the [[Herculaneum]] (from 1731) and [[Pompeii]] (from 1764). [[Charles Cochin]]'s ''[[Observations upon the Antiquities of the Town of Herculaneum]]'', an early report of the [[fresco]]es at Herculaneum, was unfavourable. | ||
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The combination of phallus and hanging bells (fascinum and crepitacula or tintinnabula) was used as an apotropaic talisman to ward of evil, the Roman name for the male organ was the fascinum meaning favourable or propitiatory, thus symbolizing both fecundity and protection.[1]
A bald, bearded, horse-tailed satyr balances a winecup on his erection, on an Attic red-figured psykter, ca. 500-490 BC
This statue of Mercurius (Pompeii tintinnabulum)[2] is the fourth object from the excavations of Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Stabiae I wish to highlight. The previous three were The Satyr And The Goat[3], the Priapus[4] from the House of the Vettii and an example of the so-called tintinnabulua[5], bronze phallic wind chimes, also called fascina.
At least, I hope I'm right in assuming this comes from the collection of Pompeian erotica.