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The historic influences behind the art designs in "Helen
of Troy"
By Anthony Beeson,
Honorary Archivist, Association for Roman Archaeology
Edward Carrère’s task to create a believable Troy for the
screen was not an easy one. Although containing clues as to the Bronze Age
city’s appearance the archaeological site (as it was known in the early 1950s)
was not of epic proportions. The real Troy had been a wonder of its age in the
Mediterranean for its layout and elegance of its stone work but scholars had
long questioned the small size of the site. Could this place of cut stone and mudbrick really have been the great city of Homer’s poems? It is now known that
the area previously considered to be the city was just the acropolis of the
town. Probably it was here that the houses of the Royal family were as well as
the most sacred buildings. Below this on the plain there once stretched out a
great lower city.
Carrère therefore created a fantasy city for the screen like
all before and after him have done. He gleaned clues as to the appearance of a
Minoan styled city from the very few books that were then available on the
period. That his fantasy Troy is so beautiful and so believable is a tribute to
his skill and artistry. It follows the spirit of Homer’s Troy if not its exact
detail. Troy appears in the Iliad and Odyssey as a great, wealthy and widespread
city guarded by mighty walls and towers. It has wide streets, lofty gates and an
open square set before a splendid palace. Its buildings are well built and made
of dressed stone. All these things Carrerè depicted. Homer’s city wall had
angles in it and the archaeological fortification had offsets. These features
again appear in the movie city. The real Troy had walls and towers with a
pronounced batter to their lower courses which were surmounted by a vertical
wall and again this feature may be seen in the film.
Carrère’s bastions owe much
to those on the Aurelian wall in Rome, particularly one near to the Porta Appia.
Only the one by the Scaean gate was actually built but those that appear in the
matte shots of the outside of Troy are good copies of the Aurelian towers but
without their upper storeys.
(Picture on Sets Page).
It is obvious from the early sketches Carrère made of the exterior of the city
that he was at first not entirely at ease with his “Minoan” Troy. It is
interesting to compare this image
(seen here below) with
that of the city taken from the same angle as it appears in the stirring scene
of the first Greek attack on the city walls
(picture on Sets Page). Details
are different, but the general stepped arrangement of the walls can be traced. One great problem was that the Troy of legend and archaeology surmounted a hill.
The back lot at Cinecitta was quite flat and so the buildings clustering up the
hill could only be supplied by Louis Lichtenfield’s beautiful matte paintings. The palace and square in the film (which should have topped the hill) had to be
built on flat ground and so was constructed within sight of the Scaean Gate, but
all of the panoramic views of the city show a metropolis built on rising ground. The city as seen in the landscape from outside is roughly the same shape as the
archaeological Troy as it was then known but hugely enlarged.

THE GATES
Three of the city’s gates are seen in the film. These are
the Scaean Gate, which is nearest the palace, the North Gate and one other which
is presumably the
Dardanian Gate of the Iliad. All are virtually identical
in design although the Scaean, as the most important, has a slightly more
elaborate superstructure. Carrère seems to have based these magnificent
gates on the tripartite Minoan and Mycenaean religious structures that one sees
in the art of the era, with a tall central block flanked by lower wings.
These, as will be seen below, were also his ultimate inspiration for the palace
itself. For the gates he retained the single columns of the side wings and
used them as a flanking device for the taller central section. The gates
look quite believable as Minoan designed structures, really because of this
tripartite design, even if they are actually beyond the skills of Bronze Age
builders.
The inspiration for much of the decoration of both the
structure and the gates themselves must have come from the engravings found in
Georges Perrot and Charles Chipiez’s volumes "Art in Primitive
Greece" London, 1894. There the two engravings reconstructing both
the palace façade and that of the tomb known as the Treasury of Atreus at
Mycenae, contain most of the decorative elements that Carrère was to include in
his finished designs for the gates.
In
order to accommodate the wooden horse Carrère was forced to make the gate
higher and wider than would have been likely or probable in the Bronze
Age. It is also questionable whether the Trojan gates would have been
structurally sound with their vast stone lintels and heavy over-portal
frames. The great door opening at the Treasury of Atreus which is about
the largest doorway we have evidence for in the Aegean was almost 18 feet in
height by 9 feet in width. In his original drawing of the exterior of the
city the gates appear less dominant and mere openings within the body of the
wall, and it is only later that they dominate it. They also sport relieving
triangles over the portals in the drawing. Carrère’s sketch of the
exterior of the Scaean gate reproduced here shows it flanked not only by columns
but also by sloping walls which are surely a legacy of the side walls in Chipiez’s
restoration of the Treasury of Atreus.
The Scaean Gate is heavily supported by solid rectangular
wings of masonry. From the top of these rise two tall rectangular pier
buttresses that clasp the sides of the great door frame and rise above it. They
are crowned on their internal and external faces by two pairs of colossal horns
of consecration. Smaller curved buttresses support these piers.
Above the portal a great fresco is painted, of all the gates, this most
resembles a sacred shrine in silhouette. Internally the right hand pier
through which the windlass chain for the gates is threaded is supported by an
additional buttress.
The double gates themselves are portrayed as being solid
bronze, but in reality such Bronze Age barriers are more likely to have been of
wood covered in sheets of embossed metal as on a door carved on the Sanctuary
Rhyton from the palace of Zakro on Crete. At Troy the outside faces of the
doors are covered with five pairs of triglyphs separated by strips of scrollwork
above a pair of framed panels each bearing a central lion’s head. Below
this may be found a zig-zag decoration . Rosettes surround the whole
design. Internally the gates are covered by two huge triglyphs vertically
arranged above a band of zig-zag and again surrounded by rosettes. All of
this decoration and the painted architectural blockwork of the inner portal is
suggested by the Chipiez palace reconstruction (plate XI).
The other city gates are basically similar to the Scaean but
lack the number of supporting side buttresses. One, that appears in a
pre-war arms training shot and again in a funeral pyre scene has a strange
double entranced opening in the external face of the fortification wall to its
right. The same feature may be seen in the distance on some of the studio
shots taken on the ramparts where this gate is also featured.
To
the left of the internal face of the gatehouse there is a high podium upon which
is a pedestal bearing a great bronze bull’s head, yet another reference to the
Aegean world. This appears in the designer’s early drawings. Above
this and on a level with the rampart is a small building with a colonnade.
The gatehouse and windlass are to the right of the gate and consists of a solid
block of masonry approached by a wide staircase illuminated by a brazier.
The windlass is placed on a higher platform and also served by the staircase
which turns to the left on its way to the rampart.. The outside of the
gatehouse platform is ornamented with a wide painted band of red ochre below a
band of roundels. It is topped by five sacred horns. T he most memorable
feature of the structure is without doubt the most anachronistic, and yet so
visually exciting that one can forgive the designer for his liberty with
history. This is the pair of great bronze wolf heads with rings through
their mouths that sprout from two faces of the
platform. They are in fact colossal copies of one of a series of
carnivores that were found in the remains of the Emperor Caligula’s pleasure
barge at the bottom of Lake Nemi. On the barge they served as mooring
rings. What function they were supposed to serve at Troy is debatable but
they looked magnificent and were in Carrère’s
drawings from an early
stage. Adjoining the gatehouse platform is the most enigmatic of the
buildings on the set. It is a small structure with a front colonnade of
seven Minoan columns and is heavily crowned with an entablature of roundels and
sacred horns. Drawings show that it was originally intended to be twice
the size that was actually constructed. It is very likely that it was based on
the iconic columned fragment of the North Entrance at Knossos. It is
difficult to interpret its function on the set but, notwithstanding its size, it
is likely to be the "Trojan temple" that the film’s publicity
mentions the construction of. Its position would attach it to the rear of
the great columned palace building seen in exterior glass shots and mentioned
below. Certainly it has become well known through its inclusion over the
years in children’s illustrated books where the illustrator has drawn on
Carrère’s sets.
The Palace
This building is probably Carrère’s most successful design
for the film, although early drawings show that he had problems in achieving it.
Archaeologically the palace is thought to have crowned the Trojan acropolis and
Carrère had originally intended this for the film as well. The drawings show a
multi-columned façade with vast areas of steps and a small tetrastyle temple
off to the right. The two structures were to have been linked by an open Minoan
colonnade. The flatness of the Cinecitta backlot ruled this out and so he
repositioned the palace to the right of the Scaean gatehouse. The early external
view of the city shows a great columned building poking up above the walls to
the left of the gate, and Carrère retained this and obviously intended it to
represent a wing of the palace. It shows most clearly in the shots of the fight
between Hector and Achilles. Although existing only as a matte painting the side
wall was actually built albeit to a lower height, and can be seen crowned with
horns in many of the scenes of the film and stills of the sets.
(Troy sketch, first
attempt)
Carrère’s breakthrough with the palace design was his
discovery of the famous "Grandstand Fresco" from Knossos with its
central pillar shrine. This was to provide the framework for the final palace.
Although symmetry in architecture seems to have been unimportant to the Minoans
the triple unit obviously had great religious significance. Thus in the
Grandstand Fresco the dominant central double pillared section is flanked by
symmetrical single columned wings at a lower level. Using this painted structure
as his model Carrère then divided the two central columns by inserting a
staircase and then also widened and raised the height of the wings placing
central staircases in them from whence the long columns then rose. He then
inserted the columned galleries with their wall paintings either side of the
stairs. Grand and wide flights of stairs as palace approaches with central
columns are a noticeable feature at the Cretan palaces of Phaistos and Knossos.
The result of all this was a spectacular and harmonious facade and one that was
believably of the era.
That Carrère did use the painted shrine as his model is
proved by a later drawing showing an early stage of this final design. At this
point he retained not only the central columns springing from their giant horns
but also the painted decoration of the wall below. On the drawing this has been
split into two by the insertion of the central staircase. This pattern is known
as a triglyph and was used to great
effect on the bronze city gates. The chequer
work of the cornice and the circular beam ends from the fresco are retained in a
slightly altered form on the finished façade as are the square "C"
shapes of the side walls of the central section. This drawing also shows single
columns standing on the forecourt in front of this entrance topped by strangely
shaped pieces of sculpture. These single columns were to develop into the two
screen colonnades of four columns topped by horns of consecration that stand on
the low sloping walls that frame the first wide stairway from the square. Adjoining these a 7 foot high sloping wall rises from the square and acts as a
parapet to the walkways for the side stairs.
Although the central staircase of the Trojan palace with its
giant horns of consecration is obviously the most important it is actually half
the width of the grand staircases either side. The central stairs lead up to the
Throne Room on the first floor and appear to divide at the top of the first
flight in front of the statue of a goddess who stands with her arms raised.
The
way to the Throne Room was to take the left hand stair at the divide.
Notwithstanding that only the lower part of the palace was constructed,
this alone rose to over 40 feet in height. Matte paintings provided the upper
storey with its central balcony and Throne Room for the long shots and for the
view of the square when the horse is left alone after the victory celebrations.
Carrère’s drawing of the palace façade seen from a street opposite shows the
central section with an upper storey having sloping sides similar to an Egyptian
temple pylon. It has three small windows. The final design featured wings with
two triple columned verandahs either side of a central doorway and with two
solid blocks of masonry beyond these. That nearest the ramparts bears a little
columned kiosk on its upper floor. It is in this area between the city wall and
the palace that the houses of Aeneas and Paris seem to be placed in the film
Shrines in Troy
Carrère designed four religious shrines for the city that
briefly feature in the film. The most substantial stands opposite the right hand
wing of the palace façade. It appears in the scene of the Greeks streaming into
Troy past the wooden horse. It
consists of a square podium approached at the
rear by a flight of steps. Two statues of goddesses stand on the platform facing
the palace, each fronted by a huge pair of sacred horns. On the steps behind
them two statues of gods face in the opposite direction and overlook the street
to the rear. On the left hand side of the structure a bronze wolf head fountain
spout
protrudes from the podium over a shallow rectangular basin. This, like the great
wolf heads on the gatehouse, is based on the famous bronze animal heads used as
mooring rings on the Emperor Caligula’s pleasure barge found in Lake Nemi.
The
podium with its wolf head is seen again shortly afterwards in the
film but this time stripped of its religious statues and horns, and with a
colonnade adjoining it. It becomes the scene of Ulysses’s mocking speech
"A magnificent leadership Agamemnon…". Yet again the podium is used
earlier in the film as a viewing platform for Trojans as the wooden horse is
dragged into Troy, only this time the camera shows its rear steps and the low
wall surmounting the back of the structure.
The three other shrines that Carrère designed are all of the
same type. These free standing structures are pillar shrines, consisting of six
paired columns standing upon a high base and heavily roofed. That standing in
front of the palace, and seen when
Priam and Hecuba are waving farewell to Paris, is crowned by multiple pairs of
horns of consecration, and it is likely that the others should have been so
treated as well. During the sack of the city another appears at the end of a
street and is flanked by steps up which Trojans flee. Finally one stands in the
middle of the road leading to the North Gate and is the scene of Paris’s
death. Although pillar shrines existed in the Minoan world these interesting
Trojan structures are Carrère’s own creation.
(Minoan Pillar Shrine)

Troy. The Mural Paintings
No traces of Bronze Age mural paintings have been discovered as yet at Troy,
but the likelihood is that they once
existed and were swept away in the
rebuilding of the site in Greco-Roman times. It is assumed that the main palace
buildings occupied the summit of the acropolis and were raised during the
building of the Temple of Athena in classical times and what remained was later
swept away by Schliemann’s drastic excavation methods. No Minoan or Mycenaean
palace in the Aegean was without its wall paintings and murals existed in the
Hittite world as well, so it is unlikely that Troy failed to follow the fashion.
Lacking actual Trojan examples to follow, Edward Carrère has naturally
decided to decorate his Minoan styled city with murals
based on those of the
same era. The inspiration for these are the restored series from the Corridor of
the Procession fresco in the Palace of Minos at Knossos and the Procession of
Ladies from the Palace of Kadmos at Thebes on mainland Greece. Rather than
simply copying existing subjects, however, Carrère has designed his own figures
in the spirit of the originals.
The Gate Murals
The great panels above the lintels of the city gates both internally and
externally are decorated with processional scenes. Only the lower parts of the
figures were actually painted, the rest being finished off by the matte
paintings that supplied the upper storeys to the surrounding buildings. The
seaward side of the Scaean Gate has the faded remains of a scheme similar to
that seen on one of Carrère’s preliminary sketches. The gate itself is
recessed in a great frame decorated on its outer edge by bands of a running
scroll based on that found on the legs of the famous Ayia Triada sarcophagus
from Crete and the Shield Fresco from Tiryns Palace. The decorative lintel panel
above the gates shows the remains of two confronted groups of three figures who
walk towards each other holding sacrificial rhytons. The inside of the gate
bears a framed procession of six figures moving to the right in the direction of
the palace and bearing items of tribute. Like those of the outer panel they wear
garments that are inspired by, but not identical, to those of Crete. The inner
gate is also framed by a border of scrollwork with an additional vertical strip
of a blockwork pattern. Unlike the exterior façade, the placing of the internal
buttresses results in the scrollwork being directly juxtaposed to the decorative
processional panel.
The Palace Murals
The palace façade displays the finest examples of wall painting to be seen
in the film. The subjects are again figurative and highly Minoan in inspiration.
The scheme is processional with figures walking through a lily field against a
white background and a wavy ochre band. Figures almost 15 feet in height face
the palace square at the back of square niches. The side walls of these niches
are covered in painted lilies. Those figures on the left hand side of the palace
are of women whilst those on the right are of men, suggesting that both sexes
had their own section of the building. The figures on both sides of the façade
face toward the central and main entrance to the building. They are all dressed
in Minoan costume. On the left the first woman holds a small flask and flowers
whilst her companion plays a lyre. Between these two images, and on the walls
flanking the top of the steps to this entrance, two pairs of women are painted
on either side with their hands raised in a gesture of adoration. They face
toward the doorway which is flanked by panels of painted lilies. On the far
right of the façade a man in a Minoan kilt holds a bowl whilst his companion in
the other niche bears a short standard of singular design which has no ancient
parallel. Although no photographic proof has been found it is to be expected
that four male figures in the same adoring posture as the pairs of females on
the left hand staircase flanked the right hand one. The decoration of the side
walls of the main staircase in the centre of the building is a slight problem..
Photographs of the left hand side show three Minoan style women. On the right two women in elaborately patterned
dresses face a third who approaches from the left through a field of lilies.
their arms are raised in the Minoan gesture of conversation. Long stylized
locks of hair hang down either side of their bodies. Below their feet the
painting is finished by a border of Minoan rosettes. The
same arrangement occurred on the opposite wall . On either side of the main
entrance stand antithetical male figures with an arm raised in the gesture of
worship. It seems likely that the idea for placing this pair was suggested to
the designer by the mourning men on either side of the painted doorway in the
Tomb of the Augurs in Tarquinia, Italy, although the Trojan figures are pure
Minoan in gesture and dress wearing the short belted kilt and cod piece.
(Thebes Procession Fresco) |
Although the murals are remarkably close to the spirit of Minoan and
Mycenaean painting the ancient convention of using white for the female flesh
was not followed, and the artists simply used a paler shade of brown than
employed in the male figures. An interesting touch is the inclusion of the
occasional hanging flower garland. This is an Etruscan fashion found in tomb
paintings of feasts. As will be seen from the paintings in the Throne Room,
Carrère, or the artists employed, merged elements of Etruscan mural paintings
into the Trojan murals. Whether this was intentional as a reference to the later
history of Aeneas and the Trojan refugees in Italy, or by pure chance, the
merger was an extremely successful one.
The Throne Room
Murals
The series of paintings flanking the throne in this chamber
are again mostly Minoan and Mycenaean in inspiration, but with a strong
flavour of the Etruscan. High on each side wall there is a biga or two
horse chariot against a pale and plain background. That on the left holds
only a driver but the chariot on the right has a passenger as well. They
all wear long tunics. These chariot groups are similar to those found at
the palace of Tiryns on the Greek mainland, but the long legged horses are pure
Etruscan, as are the trees and flower garlands behind them. On the walls
behind the throne are two groups of men in Minoan kilts with their hands raised
in adoration. Two appear on the left whilst three are painted on the
right. The plants growing behind them are again in the Etruscan style.
Other mural paintings
Two rather inferior colour slides that were given to
the author by Carrerè in the 1970s show that more figured paintings were done for sets in the film than were
actually used or shown in the finished production. These include an elaborate
study similar in style to the adoring women on the left hand side passage and a
procession fresco of youths in Minoan style but wearing costumes that are
strongly influenced by Etruscan murals. Another fragment, which may have joined
this procession shows a similar youth standing before a female figure who
may well represent a goddess. This panel is finished by a strip of scrollwork
similar to that found on the city gates.
Bands of plain colour wash may be seen on some buildings in the city, notably
the stepped gatehouse platform with the bronze wolf heads next to the main gate.
The same technique is used in the Spartan palace, where other paintings are
noticeably absent.
The Marble Pavements
Although most of the buildings on the set of Troy consisted of nothing more
substantial than a wooden framework coated in wooden panels and plaster,
visitors to the site were astonished to find real marble used on some of the
floors. It was said that it was far cheaper to use the original materials than
imitation, especially where they were exposed to the weather. Most admired were
the two decorated opus sectile pavements of the Palace. The Throne Room had a
floor with a two colour scheme, showing horses chariots and warriors and taken
from painted pottery designs. The glory of the Palace, however was that
magnificent exterior pavement that can be seen in the shot where Hector is given
the standard of Troy and made head of the fighting force
(see Warriors page). This
superb pavement consisted of three panels of red, blue, black and white marble
edged by a running scroll. The central panel had a circle looped by a flowing
garland, whilst the outer panels consisted of two identical designs of intersecting
squares. Such pavements owe more to ancient Rome than the Bronze Age, although
the running scroll is of the earlier period. Palaces in Crete and on the
mainland had decorated and patterned floors but of painted plaster.

The Houses and Streets of Troy
The houses of Troy are loosely based on those to be found on the famous town
mosaic from Knossos. This is not an actual mosaic but a collection of
small faience inlays that once ornamented a wooden piece of furniture and seems
to have depicted an attack upon a city. Carrerè, however, must also have
looked at the ground plan of the excavated Troy VI as we find buildings with
open fronts holding a pair of columns on his streets like one finds in
houses VI
A, B and C. The original structures were freestanding however and not part
of a street façade. The upper storeys are surmised but most likely a
second storey with windows placed above doors appears in ancient depictions and
are noticeable in a relief now in Larnaca Archaeological Museum, Cyprus. The
relief found at Hala Sultan Tekké shows a building façade of the period with a
large door above which are a pair of shuttered windows. Above these may be
seen the remains of a pair of Sacred Horns. Traces of red paint remains on
the piece. Other influences in his house designs may have been the
reconstructions at Knossos, particularly the Caravanserai and elements of the
palace itself. The Minoan mural paintings again will have afforded ideas.
Whereas the ancient examples show beams and half timbering the Trojan houses of
the film are all ashlar but with some painted decoration. One house at least
shows a painted imitation of half timbering at first floor level.
In the exterior scene of the fight between Achilles and
Hector one can see what must be an attempt at a reconstruction of an actual
Trojan building from Troy VI showing above the battlements.
(set page ) This is
to be found to the left of the great columned building, which itself is on the
site of the Pillar House of the real city. The house in question has a series of
square windows on its first floor. Below this the wall slopes out in a batter.
This is presumably an attempt to reconstruct house VI M whose sloping lower
walls are such a feature of the site today. Its appearance in ancient times must
have been very similar to what is portrayed here although possibly with an
additional storey.
Many of the buildings on the set were flat movable
facades that could be positioned to form new streets, so it is often possible to
spot the same buildings in different contexts. The side of the Palace Square to
the right of the Palace façade seems to have been more or less permanent part of
the set but several of the buildings were also used in shots taken of the city
from that building’s balcony.
(set page)
They also appear in the opening shot of
the Palace Square.
(set page) By using a matte painting which shows the city
spreading up its hill in the scene of Paris’s return to Troy it was possible to
add windows and horns of consecration to buildings already seen in another
context. Most recognizable is a three storey house with its projecting upper
floor supported by two columns.
(set page)
This appears opposite the Palace in
the balcony scenes, but is provided with windows above the columns in the return
of Paris scene by the use of the matte painting.
Although not noticeable in the moving film, it is
obvious from stills that buildings and streets were altered and widened during
filming in order to produce more impressive camera shots. Also different
combinations of building fronts were obviously tried to gain the most impressive
effect. The Lichtenfield paintings depict several tall campanile like buildings
scattered throughout the city. These are no doubt for the benefit of Marlowe’s
famous reference to the “topless towers of Ilium”
Although the interior of the buildings are generally blandly
austere with ashlar walls (the smooth stone of Homer’s Troy) one interior may be
distantly based on a real Trojan house. That is house VI F, with its double row
of internal columns. This may have been the inspiration for the main chamber in
the house of Paris and Helen in the film.
Carrerè’s Troy therefore is a fantasy city but one that draws on the
archaeological record of the period and of the remains at Troy itself. Grander
and more impressive than any Bronze Age city ever was, it nevertheless
encapsulates the wonderful city of the romance.

Helen of Troy Stills
click on image for larger picture

Pictures from the Anthony Beeson Collection
Pat & Anthony

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