A CYCLADIC MARBLE KANDILA
A CYCLADIC MARBLE KANDILA
A CYCLADIC MARBLE KANDILA
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PROPERTY FROM AN INTERNATIONAL COLLECTION
A CYCLADIC MARBLE KANDILA

EARLY CYCLADIC I, CIRCA 3200-2700 B.C.

Details
A CYCLADIC MARBLE KANDILA
EARLY CYCLADIC I, CIRCA 3200-2700 B.C.
7 ¾ in. (19.7 cm.) high
Provenance
with Galerie Heidi Vollmoeller, Zurich, acquired in 1973 (Antike Kunst, 1977, no. 7).
The Heidi Vollmoeller Collection, Christie's, London, 29 October 2003, lot 539.

Brought to you by

Rowena Field
Rowena Field Junior Specialist & Cataloguer

Lot Essay

The moniker kandila was given to Cycladic pedestaled jars because of their coincidental likeness to Greek church lamps. Most such jars conform to a style with ellipsoidal bodies fashioned with four evenly spaced lugs, a collar, and a pedestal foot, as observed here. According to P. Getz-Gentle (p. 5 in Stone Vessels of the Cyclades in the Early Bronze Age), the kandila “is the most complex marble vase form produced in the [Early Cycladic I] phase. Not only is it the receptive form most often repeated, but it was apparently the most plentiful of all marble forms of its time, figurative or receptive.” For a similar example from the Leonard Stern Collection, see pl. 16d, no. A65 in Getz-Gentle, op. cit.

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