AN ETRUSCAN ENGRAVED OSTRICH EGG
AN ETRUSCAN ENGRAVED OSTRICH EGG

CIRCA MID 6TH CENTURY B.C.

Details
AN ETRUSCAN ENGRAVED OSTRICH EGG
CIRCA MID 6TH CENTURY B.C.
Sculpted in shallow raised relief, with a central frieze of four panels divided by thin voluted columns, one panel enclosing a winged griffin, one a winged horse, one a stag, and one a horseman with a short staff in his left hand, each walking to the left, the details incised, the base with a band of rays rising up from a central disk, with triangles between the rays, the upper register with a band of descending lotus blossoms, the registers divided by two broad bands, the upper end open to the hollow interior
6¼ in. (15.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Henningsen Collection, Copenhagen, 1960s-1980s.

Lot Essay

On loan to the J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, 1987.

Ostrich eggs are known from Egyptian and Mesopotamian tombs from the 3rd millennium B.C., and from Mycenaean tombs of the 2nd millennium B.C. They are particularly common at Phoenician and Punic sites from the 7th to the 2nd century B.C.
According to Moscati (p. 456, "Ostrich Eggs" in The Phoenicians) "the fragility of the eggshells made them luxury goods meeting the demand of an elite market, which became smaller and more refined the farther away it was from the source" in Africa. Phoenician painted ostrich eggs have been found in Etruria, but there is also a rare group, like the present example, that are engraved by Etruscan artists. Six similar eggs were found in the Polledrara necropolis of Vulci, and another was sold at Christie's, Tokyo, 16-17 February 1980, lot 675.

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