Archaeologists have tentatively attributed this property to one Marcus Lucretius—perhaps a priest and member of the city council—based on an inscription found on a still-life fresco with a painted letter bearing his name. Additional surviving paintings show us something about how the homeowner wanted to be perceived and the values he wished to project.
The House of Marcus Lucretius contained more than thirty rooms on the ground floor alone. The second story did not survive.
When a visitor entered the triclinium (dining room), the first image they encountered was a large central painting depicting a moment in the story of the demigod Hercules and the Lydian Queen Omphale. Drunk during a feast for Bacchus, Hercules exchanged his clothes with those of Omphale, a demonstration of Bacchus’s power to influence behavior through wine. This fresco presented Marcus Lucretius as a gracious host who invited visitors to enjoy themselves, but also to be conscious of the potential pitfalls of too much wine.
Brought low by overindulgence, the central figure of Hercules can no longer stand without support and his head lolls to the side as an erote blows pipes in his ear. Before him, his massive wine cup has fallen to the ground and another erote looks at his reflection in its silver surface. Hercules wears a crown of grape leaves sacred to the god Bacchus, and displays Omphale’s elegant garments and footwear for the viewer. Behind him, the sound of a drum and the movement of revelers communicate the frenetic nature of the festivities. At right, Omphale presides over the scene, wearing Hercules’s lion skin and carrying his club, remnants of his heroic endeavors that emphasize even the strongest is no match for the powers of Bacchus.
The large central wall paintings were surrounded by smaller, equally festive scenes. These smaller panels depict erotes (cupid-like figures that personify love) and psyches (small female figures that personify the soul) at leisure.
Using nineteenth-century documentation, contemporary scholars have been able to digitally recreate the triclinium (dining room) with the position of each fresco.