Bacchanal: The Orgy in Ancient Greek and Roman Inspired Art

  • Posted by Izabael DaJinn
  • Posted on August 24, 2009 at 8:43 pm

This blog was inspired not just by my love of Greek art–but also–I have to come clean here–my obsession with the Southern Vampire Mysteries (aka. the Sookie Stackhouse books) by Charlaine Harris and the HBO TV-show True Blood.  In recent episodes (taken from the book the Living Dead in Dallas), there has been a maenad (“maened” for the spelling-challenged) character who throws crazy “nature” orgies with the local townsfolk. 

Maenads were the drunken female followers of Dionysus, the god of wine and divine madness.  The term “bacchanal,” or “bacchanalia,” essentially means “divine orgy” and comes from the name Bacchus, the Roman version of Dionysus.  So technically the Greek versions of these orgies weren’t called bacchanals, but are instead are referred to as the “Dionysian Mysteries”. 

The Dionysian Mysteries were holy rituals which used various intoxicants and other trance-inducing techniques, such as dancing, music, and sex to remove inhibitions and break down artificial social constraints, thus liberating the followers of Dionysus, allowing them to return to a more primitive, natural, and blissful state of consciousness.

So let’s visit some bacchanals of yesteryear, shall we?  Notice how often Pan, the Goat-God (represented by The Devil card in the tarot), shows up.  He loved to hang out with Dionysus and Bacchus (when know by his Roman name “Faunus”).  He was quite the life of the party!

bacchana

RICCI, Sebastiano
c. 1716
Oil on canvas, 84 x 100 cm
Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice

 

 

15436-bacchanal-of-putti-nicolas-poussin

Bacchanal of Putti by NICOLAS POUSSIN
Date :1626
Technique :Oil on canvas, 74 x 84 cm
Location :Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Rome

 

 

poussin_bacchanal_before_pan 

Bacchanal Before a Statue of Pan by NICOLAS POUSSIN (1594-1665)

 

pan

Pan copulating with a Goat, from Herculaneum, 1st century B.C.


 

AriadneDionysusPan~c~ToledoMuseumOfArt

(from an Ancient Greek krater)

 

edouard-henri_avril_25-copia2 
An illustration by Édouard-Henri Avril (21 May 1843 – 1928)

 

 bacchanalia-leveque

Bacchanal by Auguste Léveque Bacchanalien, 1864- 1921

 

bacchanal_chagall_1961

Marc Chagall’s (1887-1985) Bacchanal

 

windchime2

Erotic Windchime from Pompei (the city mostly destroyed of the volcano Mount Vesuvius  in AD 79).  These were common household items!  Just had to throw this in as it illustrates how Greeks and Romans had no concept of “obscenity” with reference to erotic art or images of sexual anatomy.

 

orgy2

Red-figure cup by the Pedeius Painter.
Late 6th century B.C., Greece.

 

stamnos 

Detail of a Vase from Stamnos, First century B.C., Greece

 

  aphrodite-cupid-pan

Aphrodite, Eros, and Pan from Delos, c. 100 BC
Athens National Archaeological Museum

 

Fritz-Zuber-Buhler-xx-La-Reine-Bacchanal-xx-Private-Collection

La-Reine-Bacchanal by Fritz Zuber-Buhler (Swiss, 1822-1896)  Originally the Dionysian Mysteries were only for women. 

 

 31944-bacchanal-pablo-picasso

And finally, (perhaps my favorite) a bacchanal by Picasso (1881-1973)

The interesting thing is that orgies were commonly depicted in ancient Greek and Roman art.  There are none in medieval art, when Pan become associated with Satan the Devil, but then in the Renaissance, Pan and bacchanals make a big comeback–which continues right up until modern times.

xoxo,
Izabael

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6 Comments on Bacchanal: The Orgy in Ancient Greek and Roman Inspired Art

  1. intersocialdimension@wtfareyoulookingat.com?

    nice blog….interesting ’bout the big gap …maybe DARK AGES was a better term for the medieval period after all…. seems to me all the christian bullshit guilted out the fun stuff and pushed it into full blow repression

  2. RickyTickyTavi

    That’s hot.
    ARe those books only for chicks? the show i’ve seen once and seems geared for both men and women

  3. Richard yes that Richard

    If you walked around a wealthy home in Pompeii, you’d see walls painted with graphic sexual images. It was simply a part of their lives. The idea of an ‘unclean’ sexuality didn’t exist in those days, though Caligula took it a bit far when he’d sit at dinner admiring the wife of a guest, take her away in mid-meal, then report back for everyone an hour later about her performance.

  4. Izabael DaJinn

    That Pan is quite a little devil…it’s not really bestiality when he fucks a goat is it? since he’s half goat…it’s just…the Discovery Channel

  5. luis

    Lindo. Maravilhosas fotos.

  6. Rex

    I fully blame the Abrahamic religions for propagating the idea that sex is sinful. Look at any culture around the world, they were quite open and matter of fact about sex, until getting messed in the head by conversion to Christianity.

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