On view
Ancient Mediterranean Art
Pair of earrings with Erotes and Isis crowns,
late 3rd–2nd century BCE
Greek
Hellenistic
2005-14 a-b
These are all objects meant to decorate and show off the body. Displaying the malleability of gold, each piece of jewelry is delicately and intricately constructed. On one pair of earrings, sculpted Erotes, winged child figures associated with Aphrodite, the goddess of love, hang from thin wire chains attached to each wing and would have gently swayed back and forth as their wearer moved. On another pair of earrings, the heads of maenads, the female worshippers of Dionysos, are sculpted on top of bases composed of hundreds of individual small spheres of gold and carefully coiled hoops. Beyond adorning the body of living individuals, beautiful gold objects like these were also often funerary in function. Some examples, such as the wreath, with its extremely thin leaves and crown too small to be worn, were likely too fragile to have been used for embellishment, and were possibly created exclusively to accompany the deceased individual.
Information
Title
Pair of earrings with Erotes and Isis crowns
Dates
late 3rd–2nd century BCE
Medium
Gold, garnet, and glass
Dimensions
a: 6.2 x 0.7 cm, 5.9g (2 7/16 x 1/4 in.)
b: 6.2 x 0.7 cm, 6.7g (2 7/16 x 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Robin F. Beningson and Joseph A. Coplin
Object Number
2005-14 a-b
Culture
Period
Purchased in 1990 by Antiquarium, Ltd, NY; given in 2005 to the Museum by Robin F. Beningson and Joseph A. Coplin
-
Gold: important ancient and ethnic jewellery and works of art in precious metals, (Geneva: Habsburg, Feldman, 1990).
, p. 186-87 (illus.); cat. no. 271 - "Acquisitions of the Princeton University Art Museum 2005," Record of the Princeton University Art Museum 65 (2006): p. 49-81., p. 57 (illus.); p. 58