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The Farnese cup / [text by] Valeria Sampaolo ; [photographs] Luigi Spina ; [translations, Julian Comoy].

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Hidden treasures (5 Continents Editions)Publisher: Milan, Italy : [Naples, Italy] : 5 Continents Editions ; Museo archeologico nazionale di Napoli, 2018Copyright date: ©2018Description: 79 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 35 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9788874398515
  • 8874398514
Uniform titles:
  • Tazza Farnese. English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 745
LOC classification:
  • NK5722 .S213 2018
Summary: "The largest carved hardstone cup to have survived from the ancient world has come down to us through the ages probably without ever becoming an archaeological find: its peregrinations took it from Alexandria to Rome and thence to Constantinople, before it returned to Rome in the fifteenth century, where it was bought by the sharp-eyed connoisseur Lorenzo de' Medici. It then joined the Farnese Collection, from where it reached the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. The intriguing story of the cup's vicissitudes as it passed from one glittering court to another is matched by the still not wholly resolved interpretation of the scene depicted on its inner face, which has been the subject of a number of different readings and continues to be a matter of debate. The work is a tour de force of the carver's art, with the figures in the inner scene and the terrifying face of the Gorgon on the outside picked out with unerring skill, exploiting every shade of the sardonyx agate of which it is made."--Publisher's website.
List(s) this item appears in: AD New acquisitions 2024 | AD New acquisitions. August 2024
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Printed Books Accademia di Danimarca Folio FO5/Ant. Spin 02 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Not For Loan Gave fra Charlotte Bundgaard ACDAN24080131

Series statement from spine.

Includes bibliographical references (page 77).

"The largest carved hardstone cup to have survived from the ancient world has come down to us through the ages probably without ever becoming an archaeological find: its peregrinations took it from Alexandria to Rome and thence to Constantinople, before it returned to Rome in the fifteenth century, where it was bought by the sharp-eyed connoisseur Lorenzo de' Medici. It then joined the Farnese Collection, from where it reached the National Archaeological Museum of Naples. The intriguing story of the cup's vicissitudes as it passed from one glittering court to another is matched by the still not wholly resolved interpretation of the scene depicted on its inner face, which has been the subject of a number of different readings and continues to be a matter of debate. The work is a tour de force of the carver's art, with the figures in the inner scene and the terrifying face of the Gorgon on the outside picked out with unerring skill, exploiting every shade of the sardonyx agate of which it is made."--Publisher's website.

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