A ROMAN RED-WARE POTTERY CUP
A ROMAN RED-WARE POTTERY CUP
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A ROMAN RED-WARE POTTERY CUP

CIRCA LATE 1ST-EARLY 2ND CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN RED-WARE POTTERY CUP
CIRCA LATE 1ST-EARLY 2ND CENTURY A.D.
5 ¼ in. (13.3 cm.) wide
Provenance
Giorgio Sangiorgi (1886-1965), Rome, thence by descent to his heir, Monaco.
The Property of a European Gentleman; Antiquities, Christie's, New York, 9 December 1999, lot 439.
with Ward & Company, New York, acquired from the above.
Private Collection, New York, acquired from the above, 2000.
Art Market, New York, acquired from the above; thence by descent to the current owner.
Exhibited
New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2007-2017 (Loan no. L.2007.5.6).

Brought to you by

Hannah Solomon
Hannah Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

Belonging to a group known as “boat-shaped cups,” this vessel features a mask in the form of a cook from New Comedy. He is defined by a wide, megaphone-like mouth forming the opening of the vessel, a broad snub nose, convex almond-shaped eyes, exaggerated arching brows, a creased forehead, and a bald pate. Similar examples have been found from the Black Sea to North Africa. For a related example from Pompeii featuring a phallus inside the mouth, see the example in the Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Naples, inv. no. 27859 (no. 663 in N.C. Stampolidis and Y. Tassoulas, eds., Eros: From Hesiod’s Theogony to Late Antiquity).

When on loan to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, it was described as such: “It is fashioned in a manner that requires the drinker to sip the wine from the mouth of a grotesque creature. By the time the cup was emptied, the user would have been face-to-face with the mask. This type of interaction between drinker and cup was perhaps a wry reflection or commentary on the user’s own state of inebriation.”

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