1992.1.a-b, Pair of earrings, Greek, 4th-3rd century B.C.E., gold, ruby


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
During the late 5th and the 4th centuries BCE, artistic talent and extraordinary craftsmanship met to produce the most magnificent Greek jewelry known. The finest goldwork of this period comes from peripheral regions of the Greek world, while there are hardly any finds from mainland Greece. It has been thought that there was a shortage of gold in Greece during the Classical period, but restrictive burial customs are a more likely explanation. Splendid gold jewelry has been discovered in Macedonia, in southern Italy, and in Thessaly, where this pair of earrings originated.

Each earring features a bull's head worked in gold repoussé, with an inlaid cabochon rubyb, and is ornamented with gold rope wire. This type of hooped earring with animal head was a common one; in addition to bull motifs, lynx, lion, and antelope were popular. The origin of the type probably goes back to the animal art of the Achaemenid or Persian empire. Such animal head earrings only become common in the late 4th and 3rd centuries BCE. The detailed workmanship of the animal head and the fine filigree ornament are especially notable in these pieces. 

Adapted from
Barbara Deppert-Lippitz, Ancient Gold Jewelry at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art in association with the University of Washington Press, 1996), 61-62, 132.

NOTES
  • entered publication as a text entry in TMS
  • updated provenance and geo x ref

Cultures

Geography 

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RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1991: Collection of Frank and Virginia Lucas Nick, Dallas, Texas

From 1991: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of the above [1]

[1] Deed of gift, found in Collection Records Object File 1992.1.a-b

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General Description
 
During the late 5th and the 4th centuries BCE, artistic talent and extraordinary craftsmanship met to produce the most magnificent Greek jewelry known. The finest goldwork of this period comes from peripheral regions of the Greek world, while there are hardly any finds from mainland Greece. It has been thought that there was a shortage of gold in Greece during the Classical period, but restrictive burial customs are a more likely explanation. Splendid gold jewelry has been discovered in Macedonia, in southern Italy, and in Thessaly, where this pair of earrings originated.

Each earring features a bull's head worked in gold repoussé, with an inlaid cabochon rubyb, and is ornamented with gold rope wire. This type of hooped earring with animal head was a common one; in addition to bull motifs, lynx, lion, and antelope were popular. The origin of the type probably goes back to the animal art of the Achaemenid or Persian empire. Such animal head earrings only become common in the late 4th and 3rd centuries BCE. The detailed workmanship of the animal head and the fine filigree ornament are especially notable in these pieces. 

Adapted from
Barbara Deppert-Lippitz, Ancient Gold Jewelry at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art in association with the University of Washington Press, 1996), 61-62, 132.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
  • entered publication as a text entry in TMS
  • updated provenance and geo x ref

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1991: Collection of Frank and Virginia Lucas Nick, Dallas, Texas

From 1991: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of the above [1]

[1] Deed of gift, found in Collection Records Object File 1992.1.a-b

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
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Objects
number
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1992.1.a-b
tags
#draft
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*Classical Art
@Bowling
ear ornaments: AAT: 300211279
hollow (form attribute): AAT: 300163023
%Archived
earrings (jewelry): AAT: 300045998
metalwork: AAT: 300015336
goldwork: AAT: 300044045
repoussé: AAT: 300054023
sheet metal: AAT: 300223016
gold (metal): AAT: 300011021
metalworking: AAT: 300053946
Greece_Ancient: TGN: 7594735
Greek_Ancient (culture or style): AAT: 300020072
bulls (animals): AAT: 300250117
granulation: AAT: 300054021
Ancient Greek (culture or style): AAT: 300020072
wirework: AAT: 300044077
filigree: AAT: 300220293
Classical Greece (style and period): AAT: 300020093
ruby: AAT: 300011082
source file
object_notes_3_c-0162.xml.nores