Marble head of a Greek general Roman, 1st–2nd century A.D., copy of a 4th C. Greek bronze.
NY Met. 24.97.32.
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Marble head of a Greek general Roman, 1st–2nd century A.D., copy of a 4th C. Greek bronze.
NY Met. 24.97.32.
GIOVANNI BATTISTA TIEPOLO
ITALIAN, 1696–1770
THE CHARIOT OF AURORA
c. 1734
Oil on canvas
19 7/16 x 19 1/8 in. (49.3 x 48.6 cm)
The chariot of Aurora, goddess of the dawn, ascends into the sky to begin a new day. Sunflowers turn toward the light, while a bat flees with the darkness. A winged boy, or putto, awakens Aurora’s brother, the sun god Helios.
The broad brushstrokes and small scale of this canvas suggest that it was made as a sketch for a larger painting. Its subject matter would have been perfectly appropriate for the ceiling of a bedroom in an opulent eighteenth-century home.
From the Clark Institute Website.
Queen Paubi's headdress (1/2)
c.2500 BCE
Ur, Iraq
“This ornate headdress and pair of earrings were found with the body of Queen Puabi in the Royal Cemetery at Ur. The headdress is made up of 20 gold leaves, two strings of lapis and carnelian, and a large gold comb. In addition, she wore chokers, necklaces, and large lunate-shaped earrings. Her upper body was covered by strands of beads made of precious metals and semiprecious stones that stretched from her shoulders to her belt. Ten rings decorated her fingers. A diadem or fillet made up of thousands of small lapis lazuli beads with gold pendants depicting plants and animals was apparently on a table near her head. Two attendants were in the chamber with Puabi, one crouched near her head, the other at her feet. Various metal, stone, and pottery vessels lay around the walls of the chamber.”
https://www.penn.museum/collections/highlights/neareast/puabi.php
THE WEDDING OF PELEUS AND THETIS
This month we’re going to take a look at Classical mythology and history and it’s reception in later art !!!
A scene super popular in Archiac Greek pottery, the subject of Joachim Anthonisz Wtewael’s painting The Wedding of Peleus and Thetis in 1612.
Check out the Clark art gallery for more info
The Clark Art Institute is one of a few institutions globally that is both an art museum and a center for research, critical discussion, and
A selection of Graeco-Roman gems from the Penn Museum
29-128-939; 29-128-1867; 29-128-910; 29-128-2235; 29-128-2124; 29-128-1969; 29-128-2023; 29-128-2428; 29-128-2236.
Pair of Earrings in the Shape of Nike
Mid-4th century BC Crimea, Kerch, Pavlovsky Barrow
http://hermitage--www.hermitagemuseum.org/wps/portal/hermitage/digital-collection/25.+archaeological+artifacts/839192
Red-Figured One Handled Kantharos with a Spout in the Form of a Phallus
ca. 460 BC Greek, Attic
http://carlos.digitalscholarship.emory.edu/items/show/7112
QUEEN PUABI'S HEADDRESS (2/2)
Ur, Iraq
c.2500 BCE
So many different displays, each rather telling...
“Her name and title are known from the short inscription on one of three cylinder seals found on her person. Although most women’s cylinder seals at the time would have read "wife of ___," this seal made no mention of her husband. Instead, it gave her name and title as queen. The two cuneiform signs that compose her name were initially read as "Shub-ad" in Sumerian. Today, however, we think they should be read in Akkadian as "Pu-abi" (or, more correctly, "Pu-abum," meaning "word of the Father"). Her title "eresh" (sometimes mistakenly read as "nin") means "queen."
In early Mesopotamia, women, even elite women, were generally described in relation to their husbands. For example, the inscription on the cylinder seal of the wife of the ruler of the city-state of Lagash (to the east of Ur) reads "Bara-namtara, wife of Lugal-anda, ruler of the city-state of Lagash." The fact that Puabi is identified without the mention of her husband may indicate that she was queen in her own right. If so, she probably reigned prior to the time of the First Dynasty of Ur, whose first ruler is known from the Sumerian King List as Mesannepada. Inscribed artifacts from the Seal Impression Strata (SIS) layers above the royal tombs at Ur name Mesannepada, King of Kish, an honorific used by rulers claiming control over all of southern Mesopotamia.”
https://www.penn.museum/collections/highlights/neareast/puabi.php