Antiquarium of Pompeii reopens

The Antiquarium of Pompeii reopened today after an extensive refurbishment and decades of closure. You’d think a site like Pompeii which under normal global circumstances draws millions of visitors would have a permanent museum to house the thousands of artifacts unearthed there and the fragile plaster casts of Vesuvius’ victims, but   it hasn’t since the Antiquarium closed after the earthquake that devastated Naples in 1980, and even that iteration of it was hobbled because Allied bombing destroyed a whole gallery in 1943. After 36 years, the Antiquarium opened again in 2016 but only for a few temporary exhibitions.

The museum was launched in 1873 by Giuseppe Fiorelli, Pompeii’s pioneering director of works who was the first to cast the cavities in the ash left behind after the victims’ bodies decomposed. Amedeo Maiuri, director of works for almost four decades (1924-1961), expanded the Antiquarium early in his tenure.

The renovated museum harkens back to Maiuri’s concept for it. He was the first to dig below the Vesuvian layer to explore Pompeii’s pre-79 A.D. history, and the new exhibitions are arranged sequentially to tell the full story of the city, from its earliest antecedents during the archaic period (7th-6th century B.C.) to its tragic demise. The 11 galleries are divided into six sections — Before Rome, Rome vs. Pompeii, Pompeii is Problematic, All Italy, Starting from Scratch and the Last Day.

Artifacts on display include little-known objects dating to the Samnite era (4th century B.C.) and iconic discoveries like the frescoes from the House of the Golden Bracelet, the treasure of silverware discovered in the country villa in Moregine a third of a mile south of Pompeii and the triclinium from the House of Menander. Some of the newest finds are also exhibited, like the collection of amulets from the House with a Garden and the most recent plaster casts of victims, two human and one equine found in the villa of Civita Giuliana.

The re-opening of the museum after so many decades of travail is “a sign of great hope during a very difficult moment,” Pompeii’s long time director, Massimo Osanna, said. He was referring to the harsh blow that the pandemic’s travel restrictions have dealt to tourism, one of Italy’s biggest revenue sources.

On display in the last room of the museum are poignant casts made from the remains of some of Pompeii’s residents who tried to flee but were overcome by blasts of volcanic gases or battered by a rain of lava stones ejected by Vesuvius.

“I find particularly touching the last room, the one dedicated to the eruption, and where on display are the objects deformed by the heat of the eruption, the casts of the victims, the casts of the animals,” Osanna said. “Really, one touches with one’s hand the incredible drama that the 79 A.D. eruption was.”

The redesigned museum will now be the first stop for visitors to the Archaeological Park of Pompeii.

2 thoughts on “Antiquarium of Pompeii reopens

  1. I am a bit saddened to observe that the Antiquarium seems to be following the unfortunate modern trend of museum displays of providing minimal information on the items displayed. In several of the photos it is clear that there are numerous artifacts on view but only a few free standing placards with information.

    This follows observation that the average museum visitor only looks at a given display case for X seconds. That may be true but does not, in my opinion, mean that all labels are then wasted. More information, well presented may engage the visitor to linger longer and learn more. Also, there is a percentage of visitors who may have an interest in a particular subject and want more information.

    Without adequate labels and information a museum is just a display of “stuff” with no context or attempt and conveying information and contest to the visitor. This is, in my opinion, sad.

  2. Good point.

    We learn -for example in the last two pictures- that the Bronze dude is alegedly representing “Dionysos”, but that seem to be all. No context whatsoever. On the right there is that huge samovar-like bronze “vessel” that could be just anything. Where is it from and what is that thing all about?

    On the other hand, it is good to have -directly on site- a small museum at all:

    Visitors to the acropolis of Lindos, in Rhodes island, are on the very top, where the view is excellent- welcomed by a small marble sign and informed that in the 19th century “marvelous” things” had been found, but all the “stuff” had been shipped off to museums in Istanbul or Ankara 😥

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