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THE PROPERTY OF A EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTORGiorgio Sangiorgi (1886-1965) was a principle of the most renowned art-dealing family in Rome. The firm was located at 117 via Ripetta at Palazzo Borghese and was famous for many important auctions, with catalogues written in collaboration with leading scholars. The galleria specialized in ancient art, furniture, ceramics and textiles. As a private collector, Sangiorgi assembled an important ancient glass collection, which he published in 1914. Masterpieces from it were sold in the 1960s and are now the pride of numerous institutions such as the Toledo Museum of Art and the Corning Museum of Glass; the bulk of the collection was sold here at Christie’s New York in June 1999, “Ancient Glass formerly in the G. Sangiorgi Collection.” As with the glass collection, many of the objects in his personal collection, such as the gems presented here, were acquired throughout Europe and never imported into Italy.
THREE GREEK STONE RINGSTONES
HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 2ND-1ST CENTURY B.C.
Details
THREE GREEK STONE RINGSTONES
HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 2ND-1ST CENTURY B.C.
Including two of garnet, one with an Egyptian crown, symbol of Isis; one with a butterfly on a rose; and one of gray chalcedony with a shoe
Largest: 9/16 in. (1.4 cm.) long
HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 2ND-1ST CENTURY B.C.
Including two of garnet, one with an Egyptian crown, symbol of Isis; one with a butterfly on a rose; and one of gray chalcedony with a shoe
Largest: 9/16 in. (1.4 cm.) long
Provenance
G. Sangiorgi Collection (1886-1965), Rome.
Private Collection, Monaco, 1970s; thence by descent.
Private Collection, Monaco, 1970s; thence by descent.
Brought to you by
G. Max Bernheimer