Local art conservator Kasia Maroney, left, talks about the work she did on this second-century mosaic with Henry Crans, right, director of facilities for the College of Arts and Sciences. The mosaic can now be viewed in the atrium of Klarman Hall.

Second-century mosaic installed in Klarman Hall atrium

The mosaic in Klarman Hall.

A fragment of a second-century floor mosaic that sat in storage for nearly 80 years now holds a place of honor in the Groos Family Atrium in Klarman Hall.

The mosaic, a gift from Princeton University researchers to Cornell colleagues, was located in the house of Iphigenia in the northeastern part of the city of Antioch on the Orontes River in southernmost Turkey. Built on the terraced hillsides of Mount Silpios and overlooking the Orontes valley, the luxury homes of this time period exhibited a dazzling array of floor mosaics depicting scenes from ancient myth and “real life.”

The Klarman mosaic adorned one of the house’s several dining rooms. Archaeological evidence, in particular a coin of emperor Marcus Aurelius found on top of it, date it to the second century A.D. Made of small cubes (tesserae) of black, grey, red, yellow and white limestone, it does not compete with some of the more colorful and intricate “paintings in stone” from the same site. But the precision and regularity with which the tesserae have been cut and arranged betray sophisticated craftsmanship.

The mosaic was discovered in 1938 by the Franco-American Committee for the Excavation of Antioch on the Orontes (at that time, the city belonged to the French mandate for Syria). Several American institutions under the leadership of Princeton University participated and were subsequently “rewarded” with archeological finds, in particular many of the almost 300 mosaics the committee lifted.

Cornell was not among them, but Frederick O. Waage, Cornell professor of history of art and archaeology, joined the team in 1933 and 1937-39. It is probably due to this collaboration that the university received the fragment, which originally was headed to join the collections of the Princeton Art Museum, next to the Antakya Museum the most important repository of mosaics from Antioch. After it was received, the mosaic appears to have never been unpacked.

The presentation of Cornell’s mosaic almost 80 years after its discovery is due to the efforts of Henry Crans, director of facilities for the College of Arts and Sciences, and the restoration efforts of local art conservator Kasia Maroney. The project was funded by the College of Arts and Sciences.

The restoration involved removing the 800-pound mosaic from its original packing crate and first testing and repairing the cement slab on which the tiles are mounted, then placing the entire piece on a custom steel and wooden platform (created by Cornell carpenters in the Arts and Sciences warehouse on Abbott Road) for its move to the atrium.

Maroney set to work restoring the mosaic after testing appropriate cleaning solvents to determine which would be most effective.

“This was a really satisfying project, and while I was working, so many people stopped to watch and ask questions, and were just so fascinated and thrilled to learn about it,” she said.

She removed thick layers of dust and environmental pollutants, as well as discolored surface adhesives that had been used to move the mosaic to a new cement slab during its excavation. Maroney then filled voids in the tesserae with gypsum plaster, which she colored to approximate the color of the untreated cement.

After the mosaic’s restoration, it was lifted with hydraulic lifts to the height of the installation site below the giant digital screen in the atrium, where the mosaic will be framed and enclosed behind glass.

Annetta Alexandridis is an associate professor in the Department of Classics and the History of Art and Visual Studies.

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Jeff Tyson