Speranza
Glass cameo cup fragment
Period: Early Imperial,
Julio-Claudian
Date: 1st half of 1st century
A.D.
Culture: Roman
Medium: Glass
Dimensions: Overall: 9.5 x 5.7 cm
Classification: Glass
Credit Line: Gift of
Henry G. Marquand, 1881
Accession Number: 1881.10.349
This artwork is
currently on display in Gallery 166
Roman decorative arts include subjects that are of an
explicit sexual nature.
Scenes of love-making appear on everyday objects such as
pottery and terracotta lamps, but they are also featured on luxury items such as
silver and, as here, on cameo-glass drinking cups.
Provenance
Until 1836,
collection of Edmé-Antoine Durand, Paris.
1836, purchased by the 10th Duke of
Hamilton at the Durand sale, Paris.
Before 1866, purchased by de Nolivos.
Until
1866, collection of de Nolivos, Paris.
1866, sold at the Hôtel Drouot, Paris (de
Nolivos sale).
Sshortly before 1879, acquired by Jules Charvet.
Until 1881,
collection of Jules Charvet, Le Pecq, Île-de-France.
1881, purchased from J.
Charvet by Henry G. Marquand.
Acquired in 1881, gift of Henry G.
Marquand.
References
De Witte, J. 1836. Description des Antiquités et
Objets d’Art qui composent le Cabinet de Feu M. Le Chevalier E. Durand.
Paris:
Imprimerie de Firmen Didot Frères, p. 360, no. 1544.
Froehner, W. 1879.
La verrerie antique: déscription de la Collection Charvet.
Le Pecq: J. Charvet,
Chateau du Donjon, p. 85-86, note 1; pl. XXXIII, 126; p. 139.
The
Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1881.
Twelfth Annual Report of the Trustees of the
Association for eight months ending December 31, 1881. New York: The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 215-216.
Clarke, J.R. 1998.
Looking at
Love-Making. Construction of Sexuality in Roman Art 100 B.C. - A.D. 250.
Berkeley: Berkeley University Press, p. 318, n. 83.
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