A ROMAN SILVER SHELL-SHAPED DISH
A ROMAN SILVER SHELL-SHAPED DISH
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PROPERTY FROM A PRINCELY COLLECTION
A ROMAN SILVER SHELL-SHAPED DISH

CIRCA 1ST CENTURY A.D.

细节
A ROMAN SILVER SHELL-SHAPED DISH
CIRCA 1ST CENTURY A.D.
6 ¾ in. (17.1 cm.) wide
来源
with Emmanuel Manolis Segredakis, Paris.
with The Brummer Gallery, New York and Paris, acquired from the above, 1928 (Inv. no. P5210).
The Ernest Brummer Collection: Ancient Art, vol. II, Spink & Son and Galerie Koller, Zurich, 16-19 October 1979, lot 658.
Private Collection, Switzerland, acquired in 1979.
Antiquities, Christie's, London, 24 October 2013, lot 89.

荣誉呈献

Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

拍品专文

This dish takes the shape of a stylized scallop shell with a small bird-head terminal at the merge of the lobes. Shell-shaped dishes, called forme di pasticceria (or patisserie molds), were produced in both bronze and silver. For a similar example in bronze from Pompeii but terminating with the head of a priest of Isis, see no. 86 in B. Conticello, ed., Rediscovering Pompeii.

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