A ROMAN BRONZE PAPPOSILENUS
PROPERTY FROM A NEW YORK PRIVATE COLLECTION
A ROMAN BRONZE PAPPOSILENUS

CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C.-1ST CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN BRONZE PAPPOSILENUS
CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C.-1ST CENTURY A.D.
3 5⁄8 in. (9.2 cm.) high
Provenance
Kunstwerke der Antike, Auktion 34, Münzen und Medaillen, Basel, 6 May 1967, lot 35.
with Phoenix Ancient Art, New York and Geneva, 2007 (Exotics of the Classical World, no. 11).
Antiquities, Christie's, New York, 6 June 2013, lot 602.

Brought to you by

Hannah Solomon
Hannah Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

The iconography of this figure is enigmatic. While the face is clearly that of Papposilenus, the paidagogos (tutor) of Dionysus, it may be that an actor is depicted. For a nearly identical figure but shown wearing a pointed cap, see the figure in Vienna, pl. 33, 4 in E.F. von Sacken, Die antiken Bronzen des K.K. Münz- und Antiken-Cabinetes in Wien; for a cloaked but not hooded Papposilenus shouldering a goat, see no. 24 in J. Petit, Bronzes Antiques de la collection Dutuit. The style of the face is similar to that on a Papposilenus furniture support now in the Israel Museum, no. 98 in O.W. Muscarella, ed., Ancient Art: The Norbert Schimmel Collection. The form of the cloak further recalls depictions of Telesphoros, the son of Asklepios (see, for example, pp. 870-878 in H. Rühfel, "Telesphoros," LIMC, vol. VII).

More from Antiquities

View All
View All