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drawing, memory, and the city: william kentridge's rome by Salvatore Settis
There is something strange about paintings, similar to written words: they stand before us like living beings, but if one asks them a question, they preserve a solemn silence.
Plato, Phaedrus, 275d1
The Eternity of the Ephemeral
( fig. 1 ) Trajan’s Column, Rome, 113 CE, detail
Rome, the “eternal city” by repute and by destiny, has always been a place of ephemerality. “I found Rome a city of bricks and I left it a city of marble,” said Augustus (63 BCE–14 CE). As his biographer Suetonius wrote, “The city was not worthy of the dignity of empire and was vulnerable to floods and fires, yet Augustus secured it against future disasters, as much as human foresight could allow.”2 The durability and splendor of marble, the dignity of the empire, and protection from Tiber floods were thus brought together in a unified strategy. It was also in the age of Augustus that Horace wrote his famous Ode to proudly trumpet the eternity of his poetry: “I have built a monument more lasting than bronze, loftier than the royal pyramids, which neither devouring rain nor raging winds, nor even the countless succession of years and the flight of time will destroy. Thus I will die, but not fully.”3 Political power and urban design, dominion over the river, the literature and art of bronze and marble—these were key elements in what we might call the Horatian image of limitless time, of Rome eternally triumphant: the Rome of the Caesars and the Rome of the popes. Such an image begins to break down, however, when we consider how the Romans celebrated their triumphs. The carefully staged ceremony of the triumphus was held at the end of every war to celebrate the victorious general’s return to Rome. He received the title imperator, which in Republican times was given to victorious military leaders (even, for example, to Cicero after the campaign of 50 BCE in Cilicia), yet starting with Augustus was used to refer to the de facto ruler of the Roman state. The word triumphus derives from the Greek word thriambos, used in the cult of Dionysus and brought to Rome through the Etruscan triumpe. This layering of language and of rituals associated with the triumph, though we may not fully understand or have documentation of them, conferred a certain historical gravity on the Roman