NEW YORK, NY.- The ancient Greeks and Romans contributed more than any other past civilization to the rise of times dominion over individual and public life. Time and Cosmos in Greco-Roman Antiquity, on view at the
Institute for the Study of the Ancient World, NYU, from October 19, 2016 through April 23, 2017, explores the ways in which they organized time, marked its passage, and linked it to their understanding of the larger universe. The exhibition brings together more than 100 objects from international collections, comprising both tools of time reckoning and itemsmany of them rarely on public displaythat illuminate the social role, perception, and visualization of time and its relationship to the cosmos. In so doing, it opens a window onto the roots of our modern system of time measurement, as well as how our understanding of it influences our conceptions of the world and our place in it.
Time and Cosmos is curated by Alexander Jones, Professor of the History of the Exact Sciences in Antiquity and Interim Director, ISAW.
ISAW Exhibitions Director Jennifer Y. Chi says, ISAW exhibitions examine ancient civilizations and cultures from across the globe, and relate them to our lives today. Time and Cosmos in Greco-Roman Antiquity is a particularly fascinating example of this. The recurring sight of people checking the time on their cellphones, or responding to a beep alerting them to an upcoming event, are only a few modern-day reminders of times sway over public and private life. Yet while rapidly changing technology gives timekeeping a contemporary cast, its role in organizing our lives owes a great deal to the ancient Greeks and Romans. We are thrilled to present this fascinating and important exhibition, and grateful to the many lenders that have made it possible.
The ancient Greeks and Romans conceived of the cosmos, or universe, as a self-contained space in which Earth stood at the center, surrounded and profoundly affectedby the constant motions of the heavenly bodies and the constellations of the zodiac. In developing time-keeping devices that explicitly aligned the passage of time with these movements, they linked time to the celestial powers that they believed shaped the environment and human destiny. As Professor Jones notes in his introduction to the exhibition catalogue, What distinguishes our experience of time from that of the Greek or Roman is that our time technology . . . conceals the science on which it is based, where ancient time-telling devices were individual, local illustrations of the cosmology in which their designers believed.
Time and Cosmos explores and interweaves the practical and iconographic aspects of time and its relationship to the heavens. The exhibitions opening gallery provides an overview of timetelling technology with a display of about a dozen sundialsthe emblematic clock of GrecoRoman antiquityand water clocks, devices that would have been found in public places such as gymnasia, as well as on private estates. The examples on view encompass an enormous diversity of historical periods, geography, and geometry, ranging from one of the earliest Greek sundials in existence, made in Asia Minor during the early 3rd century BCE, to later examples from Greece, Italy, North Africa and elsewhere.
In addition to the time-keeping devices, this gallery presents a great variety of objects that illuminate the role of time in belief systems. Greco-Roman astrology, for example, sought to link time and astronomy to human lives by deducing an individuals character and destiny from the horoscopethe arrangement of the sun, moon, and planets in the zodiac at the instant of his or her birth. Seen here are two exceptionally rare examples of astrologers boards each featuring a combination of Babylonian and Egyptian imageryon which astrologers displayed clients horoscopes while providing oral commentary.
Another highlight is a Roman mosaic from a villa in Pompeii, dating from the first century BCE first century CE, that depicts the Seven Sages, or Platos Academy, gathered in an olive grove. The superbly crafted image brings time and cosmos together, with one of the philosophers explaining the globe of the heavens, while a pillar topped by a sundial, representing daytime, is in the center of the background, and oil lamps, representing nighttime, are depicted on the left side. Elsewhere, a superlative secondfourth century CE marble relief depicts the Roman god Mithras slaying a bull. The image is circled by representations of twelve zodiacal signs, organized so that Scorpio is simultaneously in its place in the zodiac and participating in the sacrificial act.
In the second gallery, Time and Cosmos explores time in both the private and public spheres, with examples of the material objects that gave temporal structure to the daily life of both individuals and the community in such areas as religion, commerce, agriculture, and law.
Among these objects are six portable sundials. Precursors of the modern-day watch, these were prestige objects largely owned and used by those at the upper echelons of society. But they were also used by professionals, as seen here in a remarkable installation of objects from a physicians tomb from the late first century CE, where a portable sundial was deposited along with medical instruments and pills for eye ailments. Another example of a portable sundial provides a superb example of ancient precision metalworking, with nested rings that functioned as images of circles on the celestial sphere.
Much of communal life, from feast days, to religious rituals, to the harvest, to local government, unfolded according to publicly displayed calendars that measured time in months and years rather than hours. Greek calendar inscriptions typically provided a month-by-month listing of festivals, sometimes specifying the animals to be sacrificed for each one, while the ancient Romans also used publicly displayed calendars as a means of civic and cultural organization: Dates when the courts and assemblies could or could not meet were inscribed or painted, as were various festivals and other key events. The (probably) first-century CE calendar known as the Menologium Rusticum Colotianum includes a range of information for each month. For the month of January, for example, inscriptions range from measurements (the month has 31 days, the days are 9 ¾ hours long), to astrological information (the sun is in Capricorn), to agricultural and religious activities to be undertaken (Stakes are to be sharpened, Willow and cane to be felled, and Sacrifices are made to the Di Penates,).
Time and Cosmos includes several digital displays, including one in this gallery that is devoted to the Antikythera Mechanism, a sophisticated simulator of time cycles and the motions of the sun, moon, and planets. Discovered in 190001, when excavation of an ancient Greek shipwreck uncovered pieces of a bronze device consisting of complex systems of gears and dials, it is today recognized as the most important artifact of ancient science that archaeology has ever brought to light.