Sunday, June 05, 2016

A Visit to the Park of Monsters

My first thought on visiting the Park of Monsters, a.k.a. the Park of Wonders or the Sacred Grove at Bomarzo, in Lazio, Italy, was that it would be a wonderful place for a heroine in jeopardy to have all sorts of hair-raising adventures. So this post is an account of what's in this amazing place - and you can decide for yourselves.
 
This is one of the first things you see. It is so huge that you can stand up inside the gaping mouth and there's enough room to stretch your arms up to touch its teeth. There is even a bench inside.
 The Mask of Madness

The park is the creation of the 16th century Italian condottiere, Pier Francesco Orsini. It is situated on the edge of an extraordinary volcanic landscape strewn with huge tufa boulders the size of a house. Orsini turned this chaotic landscape into a place which is unlike anything else in Italy. Many of the statues have carved inscriptions which are designed to provoke thought and to challenge assumptions, as well as to entertain.

 
Fighting Giants: the standing giant is about to tear the upside-down giant apart
 The sheer scale is impressive. When I stood by the railing in front, my head just reached the eyes of the upside-down giant. It's not easy to make out what's going on in the photo: the upside-down giant's right arm is on the floor with his hair flowing over it. His head is resting on it. An enigmatic inscription carved nearby reads: If Rhodes of old was elevated by its colossus, so by this one my wood is made glorious, too, and more I cannot do. I do as much as I am able to.

What does it mean? This was an age when the aristocracy, both papal and secular, enjoyed displaying their superiority by their interest in philosophy and hermetic knowledge. The statuary is full of obscure classical allusions. Are the giants Titans? If so, they represent the ancient gods who were defeated by Zeus and the gods of Olympus. But why are they here?

 
The Leaning House

This is a full scale building carved out of one of the tufa boulders. I climbed the stairs and went inside. The floor is tilted at a vertiginous angle and my instant reaction was to feel sea-sick. And that, I think, is exactly what Orsini wanted. An inscription nearby reads: Dedicated to Cristoforo Mandruzzo, Archbishop of Trent. The mind becoming quiet becomes wiser thereby.

I got the distinct impression that Orsini didn’t altogether approve of the archbishop. Maybe he was a know-it-all and Orsini felt he needed to be jerked out of his complacency. If you suddenly feel nauseous, at the very least you'll stop talking!

 
Carthaginian War Elephant

A war elephant has lifted up a Roman soldier and is about to hurl him to the ground. The elephant towers above you - my head reached about halfway up its legs. This is a reference to Hannibal and the Carthaginian Wars – which almost defeated Rome. This is not about the (eventually) victorious Romans; here, the elephant perhaps represents the power of the unconscious mind. One might argue that, about 350 years before Freud, Orsini is acknowledging the power if the Id.
 
 Dragon and Lions in Combat

This vast statue looms out of the undergrowth. What does it represent? Normally, one would expect the lions to defeat the dragon. Here, I’m not so sure. The Park of Monsters also seems to be about turning one’s expectations upside-down.

 
Xystus with Acorns and Pinecones

But there are also places in the Park where one can relax and enjoy oneself. A xystus (my word for the week, though heaven knows when I’ll use it again!) is an open colonnade or walk designed for relaxed conversation and recreation. The plinths support alternate pinecones and acorns. Pinecones represent enlightenment and the third eye (the god Dionysus, or Bacchus to the Romans, always carries a Thyrsus, a wand of fennel with ivy wound round it and topped with a pine cone to represent the importance and power of the unconscious mind). Acorns represent spiritual growth. You can indulge in philosophical thoughts, or you can just enjoy the walk!

 The Mouth of Hell

The Mouth of Hell is another monstrous head. Inside the mouth is a large cavernous space with a stupendous echo – I sang Donne Nobis Pacem (somewhat incongruously) and the echo reverberated right through my body. The inscription here reads: Abandon all thought you who enter here.  This is obviously a reference to the message above the door of hell in Dante’s Inferno, which reads: Abandon all hope all ye who enter here. But Orsini doesn’t want his visitors to abandon hope. He wants them to put aside all preconceptions, which is a very different matter.  

 
Cerberus: the three-headed dog who guards the entrance to Hades
 
And, in case you haven’t got the point, a statue of Cerberus guards Hell’s open mouth.
 
All in all, I could envisage plenty of places for a heroine to be frightened, hide in, be imprisoned in and, generally, have her mettle tested. There are also some statues of more friendly goddesses, like Demeter, to offer sanctuary or advice.
 
 Mermaid with double tail

I leave you with a statue of a double-tailed mermaid which defies explanation. Who is she and what are the two creatures in front of her? I have no idea. And that is one of the attractions of this intriguing park. You have to be content not to know. Maybe that is the lesson Orsini is trying to teach us: sometimes we don’t know, and that is all right.

Photos by Marilyn Palmer

Elizabeth Hawksley

6 comments:

Elizabeth Bailey said...

Extraordinary. I'm so glad you gave an idea of the scale of these monsters. They must be absolutely overwhelming. I can picture your heroine running about in a state of complete panic, with the villain in hot pursuit. And when she screams in the echoing chamber, God help our hero if he doesn't rush instantly to the rescue!

Elizabeth Hawksley said...

Thank you for your comments, Liz. Much appreciated. I love the idea of the heroine screaming in the Mouth of Hell and I'm sure the hero will do just as he ought. I saw the park on a sunny day - but imagine seeing it at night by flaring torches!

Amanda Grange said...

It looks a fascinating place, Elizabeth: bizarre and beautiful and slightly creepy all at the same time. I've never heard of it before. I, too, am glad you commented on the scale of the pieces. What an extraordinary place.

Elizabeth Hawksley said...

You're exactly right, Amanda: 'bizarre, beautiful and slightly creepy' describes it perfectly. Orsini must have had a very odd mind-set to have dreamt up such a strange - and huge in every sense of the word - enterprise. He'd been a successful mercenary - I wonder if that had affected him psychologically.

Melinda Hammond/Sarah Mallory said...

Thank you for another great post, Elizabeth - always so interesting!

Elizabeth Hawksley said...

Thank you for your kind comment, Melinda/Sarah. It is certainly one of the most fascinating and extraordinary places I've ever visited. I'd have love to have seen it in its hey-day. It was actually more or less lost for about 350 years until it was re-discovered in the 1930s completely covered in creepers and with trees growing through the sculptures.

At Bomarzo, there are some old photos of men cutting back the bushes and uncovering the sculptures - some of which had fallen whilst others were broken. And some of the enigmatic inscriptions were no longer decipherable - which makes it all even more mysterious.

What one longs to discover is a contemporary diary or letter from someone seeing it for the first time.