Speranza
Marble head of Zeus Ammon
Period: Imperial
Date: ca. A.D. 120–160
A.D.
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble
Dimensions: H. from base: 48.2 cm.
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit
Line: Purchase, Philodoroi Gifts, Acquisitions Fund, Mary and Michael Jaharis
Gift, 2011 Benefit Fund, funds from various donors, John A. Moran,
John J. Medveckis, Nicholas S. Zoullas, Frederick W. Beinecke, Leon
Levy Foundation, Jonathan Rosen, Michael Steinhardt,
Malcolm Hewitt Wiener Foundation and Aso O. Tavitian Gifts, 2012
Accession
Number: 2012.22
This artwork is currently on display in Gallery
160
Zeus Ammon’s sanctuary at the Oasis
of Siwa in the Libyan desert was already famous when Alexander the Great made
his pilgrimage there in 331 B.C.
Alexander’s visit to Siwa was a pivotal moment
in the young king’s extraordinary life.
The details are shrouded in mystery, but
legend has it that the Oracle proclaimed him son of Zeus Ammon and answered
Alexander’s questions favorably, “to his heart’s desire.”
This powerful
portrait of the god combines a classical image of the bearded Zeus with
the ram’s horns of the Egyptian Ammon, an attribute with which Alexander himself
was sometimes represented. It may well reflect a sculpture created in Egypt in
the years after Alexander’s historic visit to Siwa.
The head is said to
have been discovered at the mouth of the Nile River, Egypt (Sotheby’s, New York.
Sale catalogue, November 1985, lot 50)
By 1931, art market, Rome
Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Rome, neg. nos. 80.2846-2847.
Until 1954,
collection of Ernst Leroy King, Homer, Minnesota, and Daytona Beach,
Florida.
1954, acquired by the Art League of Daytona Beach, Florida, gift of
Mrs. E.L. King.
1954-1985, collection of the Art League of Daytona Beach,
Florida.
1985, purchased by Dodie Rosekrans through Sotheby’s, New York
(lot 50).
1985-2011, collection of Dodie Rosekrans, San Francisco.
March
2007-April 2008, on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Acquired in December
2011, purchased through Sotheby’s, New York (lot
12).
References
Sotheby’s, New York. Sale catalogue, November 1985, lot
50.
Fuchs, Michaela. 1992. Römische Ideal plastik. München: C.H. Beck, pp.
214-215, note 39.
Sotheby’s, New York. Sale Catalogue, December 2011, lot
12.
Picon, C. 2012.
"Recent Acquisitions, A Selection: 2010-2012."
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 70, pp. 12-13.
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