A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE
A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE
A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE
A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE
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PROPERTY FROM A PRINCELY COLLECTION
A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE

CIRCA FIRST HALF OF 1ST CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN GOLD-BAND GLASS MOSAIC BOTTLE
CIRCA FIRST HALF OF 1ST CENTURY A.D.
2 1⁄8 in. (5.4 cm.) high
Provenance
Louis-Gabriel Bellon (1819-1899) collection, France; and thence by descent.
Les Antiques de Louis-Gabriel Bellon; Jack-Philippe Ruellan, Hôtel des ventes de Vannes, 4 April 2009, lot 110.

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Lot Essay

This opulent-looking vessel is characterised by strips of gold glass made of a layer of gold leaf sandwiched between two layers of colourless glass. During the Hellenistic period, gold-band glass was predominantly used in the creation of alabastra. The Romans, however, inspired by the Hellenistic models, applied the medium for the creation of a variety of new shapes and forms, such as we see with this example. See acc. no. 59.1.87 at the Corning Museum of Glass, for a similar vessel.

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