
Delicate fragments of frescoes on Roman-era plaster are recovered and gradually reassembled
One is illustrated with the face of a woman in tears, recognisable by her Flavian-period (AD 69 to 96) hairstyle.
Four years ago, the plaster was recovered during an excavation at a construction site in Southwark, just south of the Thames.
An archaeologist from the Museum of London Archaeology at a construction site where fragments of painted wall plaster that date to the early Roman occupation of the area around London, which began in AD 43, were found. Photo / Museum of London Archaeology via the New York Times
The scraps filled 120 assorted boxes.
Li's job is to carefully arrange, categorise and restore the original artwork.
The frescoes that have emerged, the most colossal of which measures 4.8m by 3m, were hidden from view for more than 1800 years.
The museum's haul of discarded Roman-era plaster is the largest ever amassed in the English capital.
Rob Symmons, the curator of the extravagant Fishbourne Roman Palace in West Sussex, called the site 'a discovery of the first magnitude'.
It is not unusual for painted wall plaster to be recovered from Roman archaeological sites, but rarely is it found in quantities that it was in Southwark, he said.
'Also, it's unusual for excavators to have the time and expertise to attempt reconstructions like the one that Han undertook.'
Fragments of floral decoration from a section of the plaster walls. Photo / Museum of London Archaeology via the New York Times
The Southwark plaster once adorned at least 20 internal clay walls of what is believed to have been either a luxurious private villa or an upmarket inn for state couriers and officials passing through Londinium, the precursor of modern London.
'When the structure was demolished, material from different walls jumbled together and was dumped into a large pit,' Li said.
'When you are salvaging materials from a masonry wall, the plaster tends to break apart or crumble. It's almost impossible to reconstruct the walls in their entirety, but you can reconstruct enough to see what the schemes are.'
The Romans established Londinium shortly after Roman legions, acting on the orders of Emperor Claudius, invaded parts of Britain.
A section of the plaster walls found that date to the early Roman occupation of the area around London. Photo / Museum of London Archaeology via the New York Times
The district in which the building was found is described by Andrew Henderson-Schwartz, a Mola administrator, as a vibrant and prosperous suburb.
'It was the Beverly Hills of Roman London,' he said. 'This is a place they intend to stay and Romanise.'
The occupation lasted until AD 410, when the soldiers were withdrawn.
Their Saxon successors neglected the area. By the Middle Ages, Southwark, outside the control of London's laws, was known as a place where one could find blood sports such as cockfighting and bearbaiting, alongside brothels and theatres.
In 2021, the plaster dumping site was dug up in preparation for development of the property. The following February, a large mosaic decorated with guilloche patterns and Solomon's knot motifs was unearthed.
A year later, the excavation yielded remnants of the most intact Roman mausoleum ever discovered in Britain.
Graffiti on one of the plaster walls depicts a crying face. Photo / Museum of London Archaeology via the New York Times
Li noted that the lower portions of the plaster walls, known as dadoes, were frequently made to look like stone.
Some patterns mimic costly Egyptian porphyry, a volcanic rock distinguished by its purplish hue and crystal inclusions, and frame them with veins of African giallo antico, a type of yellow marble.
Although the names of the interior decorators are not known, the researchers discovered a tabula ansata, a carving of a decorative tablet sometimes used to sign artworks, scored with the Latin word 'fecit,' meaning 'has made this'.
Such maker's marks are usually seen on ceramics in Roman London but not wall plaster.
A section of the plaster walls found that date to the early Roman occupation of the area around London. Photo / Museum of London Archaeology via the New York Times
'Unfortunately, the section bearing the painter's identity was snapped off,' Li said.
Two other fragments were joined together to reveal an etching of a near-complete Greek alphabet.
While Roman wall painters in Britain incorporated elements from other imperial outposts such as Xanten, Cologne, and Lyon, some aspects of their art were distinctly British.
One fragment initially interpreted as grapes is now understood to depict mistletoe, demonstrating that the artists applied Roman artistic conventions but with a local, British colour palette.
Bright yellow panels with pale green borders dominate the middle layers of the frescoes. That decorative touch has surfaced at only a handful of other locations across the island, including the Fishbourne Roman Palace, located roughly 100km southwest of the dig.
Li recently visited the palace to observe the wall plaster. He and Symmons suspect that the same hand, or at least artistic school, was responsible for both sets of frescoes.
'When you're looking at two paintings that look identical, down to the stroke, down to the pigment, it really kind of makes you feel like you've discovered something amazing,' Li said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Franz Lidz
Photographs by: Museum of London Archaeology
©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
17 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
Nearly 20 years on former navy diver Rob Hewitt reflects on 75 hours lost at sea
On the day he went missing he was diving with friends from Manawatū, kitted in his full navy dive gear – including a tether rope used to tie dive partners together – a weight belt, wet suit and fins. 'The skipper of the boat looked at me and said, 'We don't do that sort of stuff [tether together] here',' Hewitt said. 'They were a little bit cowboyish and that challenged my integrity but I thought, 'When in Rome, do what the Romans do', so I put all I had learned as a navy diver aside.' Sea survivor Rob Hewitt is promoting drowning prevention, hoping his experience will save lives. The first dive didn't go well - an early sign, he believes, of what was to come. 'We resurfaced and my dive partner had grabbed about five crayfish and said to me, 'Didn't you get anything?' 'I had a couple of kina. I said, 'I thought you were getting the kai and I was saving your life because there was some dangerous stuff going on in the water'.' Hewitt said that's when he made the cardinal mistake and went down alone. 'I broke the golden rule and wanted to show off and show these fellas what I could do...I had a karakia when I was 8m deep and asked god for some crayfish and kina. I saw a cray and put it in my bag. Rob Hewitt survived 75 hours at sea after "breaking the cardinal rule" and going down for a dive alone 'I went down another couple of metres and spied about 30 crays. I thought I would get the lot and plant the crays over my body, float up to the surface and show these fellas I am the man. 'It was that arrogance and crossing that line of tikanga and broke the rule of my grandfather – you only take enough for a feed.' Hewitt said he moved into an underwater cave and a rip pushed him out the other side. When he resurfaced he was 600m from the boat, which was heading in the other direction picking up the other divers. The time was 4pm. 'I had no issue because this was my workplace. There was no panic,' he said. Rob Hewitt talking water safety. Hewitt started kicking towards the boat but after 15 minutes realised the current meant he was making no headway, and started feeling concerned about expending his energy. He calculated the food he had consumed and the resources he had with him and decided to let the current take him. He spotted a rescue helicopter and realised the dive crew had called a mayday. 'I thought, 'Hey, I'm the navy diver. I should be the one doing the rescuing'.' It was that arrogance and crossing that line of tikanga and broke the rule of my grandfather – you only take enough for a feed Rob Hewitt The mental game As he waited in the ocean, Hewitt feared being judged. 'I could imagine the headline: Former All Black Norm Hewitt's brother, a navy diver, needed rescuing from the sea.' He tried to use the reflection of his face mask to attract the rescue helicopter but it headed back to the airport. 'I thought my life was only worth 48 minutes of searching. I'm 38 years old, had spent 20 years in the navy, and that's what I was worth.' 'About 8pm, I started to worry and thought, 'Who do I know that's survived out at sea floating in the water – no one',' he said. I did what anyone would do. I prayed for all my sins to be forgiven Rob Hewitt 'I did what anyone would do. I prayed for all my sins to be forgiven because sometime during the night I think I'm going to die.' Hewitt said self-pity soon turned to survival. 'I started playing little games, said karakia, recited my whakapapa to keep my mind active ... I connected to my Māoritanga, who I was as a New Zealander, as a Māori, to my wairua.' The sun rose about 5.30am. Hewitt said his face was cutting up and he was being pushed out to Kāpiti Island. He had four kina and spent an hour eating each one, killing four hours. 'I'm from Ngāti Kahungunu and eat the roe and eat the guts, but before I do, I look around to see if anyone is watching. I was worried about being judged.' Hewitt said he always carried an inferiority complex from being in the navy and being the brother of an All Black. He still had a crayfish and ate it in the evening over three hours, crying and aware it could be his final meal. He noticed his tongue starting to swell, and fingernails coming away from his fingers – something he'd seen before while retrieving bodies from people who had drowned. He was being bitten by sea lice. The third night came and Hewitt had all but given up on surviving. The rescue that saved his life Hewitt went missing around 1pm on February 5, 2006 and was rescued at 4.04pm on February 8 – after 75 hours lost at sea. 'I look up and see a little Zodiac and two of the navy divers ... I thought they were a hallucination. They said to me, 'Bro, what are you doing'. 'I said, 'Waiting for you fellas'.' Rob Hewitt teaching young Kiwis about water safety. Hewitt told the Herald his battle with Tangaroa (Māori God of the sea) and survival was never far from his thoughts. He has written two books and a German film crew is working on a documentary. New Zealand recorded 74 drowning fatalities in 2024 – the lowest since 2018. Water Safety New Zealand says while the reduction is encouraging, many fatalities are preventable, involving not wearing life jackets, entering the water alone, and underestimating the conditions. Friday marked world drowning prevention day. In New Zealand 21 people die annually while gathering kai (food) - that's about 26% of all drowning fatalities. They are predominantly male, adult, and of Māori, Pasifika or Asian descent. Joseph Los'e is an award-winning journalist and joined NZME in 2022 as Kaupapa Māori Editor. Los'e was a chief reporter, news director at the Sunday News newspaper covering crime, justice and sport. He was also editor of the NZ Truth and prior to joining NZME worked for urban Māori organisation Whānau Waipareira.


NZ Herald
a day ago
- NZ Herald
Greer Twiss the ‘Godfather' of contemporary New Zealand sculpture: Laura Vodanovich
In a way I grew up with Twiss, with his work Karangahape Rocks, 1967-69, strongly influencing my young sense of art in public spaces - it was a work that arrested my attention and I would stop and ponder it often. Sculptor Greer Twiss died earlier this month. Photo / Greg Bowker While I was working at Auckland Museum, a project initiated by Outdoor Sculpture 2001, and supported by the Edmiston Trust, installed sculptures throughout the Auckland Domain. Marquette's of these sculptures, including Twiss's work among other significant names in the artworld, were displayed at Auckland Museum in 2004. Some magnificent and striking sculptures were created as part of this initiative, but it was Twiss' work Grafting, that was my very favourite. Grafting is a series of 10 sculptures in the fernery, part of the Wintergardens in the Auckland Domain. These works include nine native birds and a pear tree, each complete with a label typical of those used on specimens you might find in a museum. The individual labels include the Latin, te reo Māori and English 'common' name for each bird, but for the tree just the word pear along with Twiss's signature. Woven through this work you can detect his interest in the colonial period through his use of three forms of classification identifying each native bird. For the pear tree, introduced to Aotearoa by missionary Samuel Marsden, Twiss dispenses with the three names and strips this specimen to just the one common name, pear. His exploration of the colonial period and the 'dialogue between the natural situation and the imposed brought into the situation' has seen him create a number of works on this theme. In 2020 his agent, Jane Sanders, reached out to us to say Twiss would like to offer a work to the Hawke's Bay Museums Trust Tai Ahuriri collection and we were delighted to accept his generous offer. The work, Hobson's Baggage, 1995, is another sculpture exploring the colonial theme. Toni MacKinnon, art curator at the time, wrote that 'Greer Twiss' sculpture brings objects together in unexpected ways… Queen Victoria is loaded into an old suitcase, there is a flag that has no way of fitting into the case, and a watering can! And what is the little lamp about?' Twiss of course made sense of this, pondering what Hobson might have bought in his luggage including, possibly, a bust of Queen Victoria. In his eyes the items all represent something including authority, cultivation and the law. It is a wonderful work to have in our collection and another way in which Twiss has positively influenced my personal relationship with artworks in Aotearoa.


Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Obituary: Maurice Gee
Maurice Gee was one of New Zealand's most decorated authors, his books for children and adults winning awards at home and abroad. For more than 50 years Gee wrote about ordinary people and ordinary lives, often with the narrator looking back at events that caused damage and unhappiness. "I don't deliberately set out to do this, but the stories turn in that direction following their own logic," he once said. "All I can do about it is make the narrative as interesting as I can and give those people lively minds." Born in Whakatāne in 1931, Maurice Gee was the middle child of the three sons of Harriet Lyndahl Gee (nee Chapple) — a some-time writer whose published work included a children's picture book — and carpenter Leonard Gee. Gee's grandfather, controversial minister James Chapple, was the inspiration for his grandson's most famous character, George Plumb. Gee was raised in the then rural Auckland suburb of Henderson — where, thinly disguised, many of his books were set. After attending Avondale College Gee went to Auckland University, where he completed a Masters in English. All Gee wanted to do was write — he had already had work published in magazines and journals before graduation — but, then as now, making a career as a full-time author in New Zealand was a fraught enterprise. He became a teacher but resigned in 1956 to dedicate himself to his craft. Grants in 1960 and '61 from the New Zealand Literary Fund kept the wolf from the door and in 1962 Gee's debut novel, The Big Season, was published. An unusual mix of rugby and crime, it was well-received, and helped its author earn the 1964 Robert Burns Fellowship at the University of Otago. During that stint in the South, Gee wrote his second novel, A Special Flower, before he trained as a librarian — his day job for several years to come. Gee, who had a son from an earlier relationship, married Margareta in 1970, having met her four years previously at the Alexander Turnbull Library. They had two daughters. Gee's third novel, In My Father's Den, was published in 1972 and has proven to be one of his most enduring works: in 2004 it was adapted into a successful film. A collection of short stories, A Glorious Morning, Comrade, appeared two years later, and it went on to win Gee the first of many awards, the fiction prize at the 1976 New Zealand Book Awards. By the late '70s Gee was at the peak of his powers. In 1978 he published Plumb, which drew on Gee's ancestors for what was the first of a trilogy about three generations of a family. It won Britain's James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction in 1979, as well as another fiction prize at the NZ Book Awards. "I can't look at my books the way I read other books. I look at them quite differently," he once said. "I'm intimately connected with them and probably wouldn't be able to identify my voice in them, if someone asked me to." A year later Gee wrote Under the Mountain, his best-known and most-beloved children's work. An eerie sci-fi thriller about aliens slumbering beneath Auckland's volcanos, it was a popular book and well-remembered TV series, and was later converted into a stage play and feature film. In 2004, Under the Mountain was the recipient of the Gaelyn Gordon Award, awarded annually to a children's book that did not win an award at the time of its publication. "Children's writing seems to be easier than adult writing, because it's coming off a different level," he once said. "There's still some pleasure to be got from both and I try to do each as professionally as I possibly can, but the thing that really engages me fully is adult fiction." Whatever his level of engagement, Gee still wrote excellent work for children for many years, including a science fiction trilogy which featured The Halfmen of O, which won Children's Book of the Year. In the late '80s Gee struck up a relationship with Victoria University, being awarded an honorary doctorate of literature in 1987 and a writing fellowship to Victoria in 1989. Three years later Gee received one of New Zealand letters most prestigious prizes, the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship. There Gee wrote Crime Story, a stinging critique from a life-long lefty of the policies of the Lange Labour Government of the 1980s; it was later filmed under the title Fracture. In 1993 Gee published his most autobiographic novel, Going West, a book which has been recognised by providing the name for a long-running West Auckland literary festival. It also won Gee another NZ Book Award. The Fat Man was another Children's Book of the Year award winner, and in 1998 adult novel Live Bodies won the Deutz Medal at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards. In 2003 Gee began to receive awards which reflected his astonishing career. He was named as an Arts Foundation "Icon" and the following year received the rich Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement for fiction. More award-winning novels (Blindsight, Salt) followed, and in 2015 he was the subject of a biography by Rachel Barrowman, a book whose subject described it as "illuminating even for me". Three years later, Gee wrote his own memoir, Memory Pieces, a work which was shortlisted for the non fiction prize at the 2019 Book Awards. In 2020 Gee and Margareta settled in Nelson, as the author of many of New Zealand's favourite books retired from writing. Maurice Gee died on June 12, aged 93. — APL/RNZ