Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities seeks to make antiquities and artifacts of the Mediterranean world accessible to a wide audience while offering print and electronic resources to both the novice and experienced collector of ancient art. With 25 years experience collecting and extensive travel in the Mediterranean world, owner Chris Maupin has consulted on ancient art for museums and private collectors.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Another Fine Ongoing Exhibit at the Villa
An ongoing, long term exhibition and a
personal favorite. For those with an interest in ancient glass, I
recommend the Getty’s publications selection on the topic, which is
extensive – http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/molten_color/index.html
Exhibits at The Getty Villa
As always, there are some great exhibitions ongoing at the Getty Villa in Malibu. Here’s one, running through March 3, 2013 –
http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/tiberius/
http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/tiberius/
Friday, November 29, 2013
Antiquities for the Holidays
Hello Customers, Fans and Friends of Clio Ancient Art:
For Black Friday, Cyber Monday and all the other shopping
days between now and the end of this year, we’ve loaded our website with many
modestly priced fine quality antiquities suitable for holiday gift giving. These
include -
·
* Several dozen Roman, Byzantine, early Islamic
and other ancient and medieval coins of all types, all reasonably priced, including
several excellent examples of the coinage of Constantine I. You may find them
here: http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c18_p1.html
·
* At least 20 examples of Roman bronze brooches of
several types. These are very personal antiquities that connect us to the
individuals who originally wore them. Many are available for under $100. You
may find these in our multi-page Ancient Jewelry section here: http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c19_p1.html
·
* Ancient oil lamps, including fine Roman redware,
Byzantine, Hellenistic and early Islamic examples - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c14_p1.html
·
* Ancient glass vessels and objects, mostly Roman,
in many shapes, styles, colors and prices - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c13_p1.html
and here http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c24_p1.html
·
* As always, we offer fine quality Egyptian
antiquities - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c2_p1.html
·
* Greek antiquities - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c3_p1.html
·
* Several pages of Roman antiquities - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c15_p1.html
and here - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c16_p1.html
and here - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c17_p1.html
· *
And mixed Byzantine, Near Eastern, Medieval and
other types of antiquities - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c26_p1.html
– and here - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c21_p1.html
Many of the fine quality objects offered in these pages also
very moderately priced for holiday gift giving or for treating yourself.
Domestic shipping is free (see our website for international shipping costs).
As always, thanks for looking and please don’t hesitate to
contact us should you have any questions.
Best wishes,
Chris M. Maupin
Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities
Chris Maupin Trust for Ancient Art
PO Box 7714
Wilmington, NC 28406
Phone: 704-293-3411
Web: http://www.clioancientart.com/
Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities
Chris Maupin Trust for Ancient Art
PO Box 7714
Wilmington, NC 28406
Phone: 704-293-3411
Web: http://www.clioancientart.com/
Friday, November 22, 2013
ANTIQUITY OF THE WEEK: Roman Bronze Arm, Hand and Purse of Mercury
http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i490.html |
Exceptional Roman Bronze Arm, Hand & Purse of Mercury
CULTURE / REGION OF ORIGIN: Roman Britain
DATE: 2nd-3rd Century AD
DIMENSIONS: 4 cm (1.57 in.) long, 3.5 cm (1.38 in.) tall
DESCRIPTION: A beautifully preserved hollow cast bronze arm and hand holding a purse from a statuette of the Roman god Mercury (equivalent to the Greek god Hermes). The arm is bent at the elbow, in the god’s typical stance, and the detailed hand grasps a shepherds purse. Mercury was the patron god of financial gain and commerce, among others roles, and statuettes of the god were especially popular in the western European provinces of the Empire. Mercury’s Greek equivalent, Hermes, was also a protector of shepherds, so his purse, which resembles an animal skin, is referred to as a shepherds purse. Unlike most smaller statuette fragments, this example is just large enough to have come from a hollow cast statuette, probably from a household or military shrine. The point at which the arm has broken away from the statuette reveals its hollow inside. The surfaces are a very smooth dark green, almost black, with small areas of pale earthen highlighting.
PROVENANCE: Oxfordshire, UK metal detecting find, declared not treasure and legally exported.
COMPARISONS: See the UK Portable Antiquities Scheme online database, object SF-EBF-303, for a smaller hand and purse found in Suffolk, and the British Museum collections online, number 1851,0813.9 for a complete figurine of Mercury found in France, measuring about 6 inches tall, holding the purse in this same posture.
Labels:
ancient,
Ancient Art,
antiquities,
antiquity,
archaeology,
art,
artifacts,
bronze,
culture,
heritage,
Hermes,
history,
Mercury,
Roman
Location:
Wilmington, NC, USA
Thursday, November 21, 2013
More Fine Antiquities Added to Our Website
http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i489.html |
Hello Again:
Just a brief note to let you know we’ve added still more fine antiquities to our website.
Here are quick links to some of these –
* Exceptional Roman Bronze Arm, Hand & Purse of Mercury – http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i490.html
* Roman Bronze Bird Fibula (Brooch) with Blue Enamel – http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i489.html
* Mixed Group of 6 Roman Bronze Fibulae (Brooches) – http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i491.html
And many more…
We’ve also added several more excellent Roman coins, some from an exceptional hoard of Constantinian bronzes – http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c18_p1.html
As always, thanks for looking. We will be adding a variety of other objects to the website in December and we will update you at that time.
Best wishes,
Chris M. Maupin
Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities
Chris Maupin Trust for Ancient Art
PO Box 7714
Wilmington, NC 28406
Phone: 704-293-3411
Web: http://www.clioancientart.com/
Labels:
ancient,
antiquities,
antiquity,
archaeology,
art,
artifacts,
brooch,
Clio Ancient Art,
coins,
culture,
fibula,
heritage,
history,
Roman
Location:
Wilmington, NC, USA
Friday, November 15, 2013
Latest Clio News: Our Move is Complete, Website Uodated and More!
Hello Customers, Friends & Fans of Clio Ancient Art:
Most of you know that in early October we were planning our move from Charlotte, NC to the coastal City of Wilmington, NC. That move has been completed and we are happily settled in our wonderful new home. Wilmington is a modest sized city of just 110,000 people but thriving, with a lively performing arts scene, major film industry, sophisticated restaurant and food community, a strong academic base with a campus of the University of North Carolina, a large Historic District featuring remarkable homes and public buildings dating from our nation's Colonial Era, the Antebellum period and later, and, of course, magnificent beaches, offshore islands, inland waterways and other natural wonders.
Now that we've settled in, we've updated our website - http://www.clioancientart.com/ - with many fine antiquities. These include -
* An Egyptian writing tablet amulet in moss agate - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i462.html
* 2 small Egyptian Late Period faience ushabtis - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i472.html
and - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i473.html
* A superb Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a duck - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i476.html
* A small Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a stylized Celtic horse - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i474.html
* A Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a standing horse - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i475.html
* Many examples of Romano-British and Pre-Roman Celtic bronze fibulae, too numerous to list individually here but these may be viewed in our "Ancient Jewelry and Personal Adornment" section here - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c19_p1.html
* A great selection of Roman coins in bronze and silver. Far too numerous to list individually here, these are listed in both our Roman Antiquities pages and in our Ancient Coins section - http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/c18_p1.html
Please note our new mailing address below.
Thank you and best wishes,
Chris M. Maupin
Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities
Chris Maupin Trust for Ancient Art
PO Box 7714
Wilmington, NC 28406
Phone (704) 293-3411
http://www.clioancientart.com/
Most of you know that in early October we were planning our move from Charlotte, NC to the coastal City of Wilmington, NC. That move has been completed and we are happily settled in our wonderful new home. Wilmington is a modest sized city of just 110,000 people but thriving, with a lively performing arts scene, major film industry, sophisticated restaurant and food community, a strong academic base with a campus of the University of North Carolina, a large Historic District featuring remarkable homes and public buildings dating from our nation's Colonial Era, the Antebellum period and later, and, of course, magnificent beaches, offshore islands, inland waterways and other natural wonders.
Now that we've settled in, we've updated our website - http://www.clioancientart.com/ - with many fine antiquities. These include -
* An Egyptian writing tablet amulet in moss agate - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* 2 small Egyptian Late Period faience ushabtis - http://www.clioancientart.com/
and - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* A superb Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a duck - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* A small Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a stylized Celtic horse - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* A Roman bronze zoomorphic brooch in the shape of a standing horse - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* Many examples of Romano-British and Pre-Roman Celtic bronze fibulae, too numerous to list individually here but these may be viewed in our "Ancient Jewelry and Personal Adornment" section here - http://www.clioancientart.com/
* A great selection of Roman coins in bronze and silver. Far too numerous to list individually here, these are listed in both our Roman Antiquities pages and in our Ancient Coins section - http://www.clioancientart.com/
Please note our new mailing address below.
Thank you and best wishes,
Chris M. Maupin
Clio Ancient Art and Antiquities
Chris Maupin Trust for Ancient Art
PO Box 7714
Wilmington, NC 28406
Phone (704) 293-3411
http://www.clioancientart.com/
Labels:
ancient,
Ancient Art,
antiquities,
antiquity,
archaeology,
art,
artifacts,
Clio Ancient Art,
coins,
culture,
Egypt,
Egyptian,
fibula,
heritage,
history,
Roman,
Roman Empire
Location:
Wilmington, NC, USA
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Antiquity of the Week: Villanovan Pottery Vessel
Our selection for antiquity of the week is thus superb, intact Villanovan Impasto Ware Vessel
CULTURE / REGION OF ORIGIN: Villanovan Culture, Italy (Northern Lazio or Southern Etruria))
DATE: 8th – 7th Century BCE
DIMENSIONS: Maximum height with handle 11 cm (4.3 in.); maximum width 13.1 cm (5.1 in.); rim diameter 12.0 cm (4.7 in.)
Link to this Item: http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i41.html
DESCRIPTION: A Villanovan brown Impasto Ware dipper. The vessel rests on a flat bottom, expands to its greatest width about half way up the bowl, narrows slightly, then continues vertically up to the lip. At three roughly equidistant points around the outside of the body, there are nipple-like projections. The handle is flat in section and divided into two loops. The entire surface is highly burnished, inside and out. There are three very small chips to the rim but the vessel is otherwise intact. A very nice example of the type.
PROVENANCE: Formerly in the collection of Lord Dayton of Corran, the collection formed between 1960 and 2000.
PUBLISHED: Ex Bonhams, ANTIQUITIES, 27 April 2006, London, Page 160, illustrated in color on Page 159.
COMPARISONS: Sestieri and De Santis, The Protohistory of the Latin Peoples, Electa, Rome, 2000, pages 36, 62 and 84 for examples of Villanovan Impasto Ware jugs or dippers of very similar form, with divided handles and projections on the body.
SPECIAL NOTES: The Etruscan civilization of Italy has its immediate roots in the Villanovan culture of west central Italy; an area open to influences from Greek and Carthaginian colonists and traders and northern European Celtic cultures. The Villanovan culture, centered in a broad area around the modern city of Bologna, rapidly developed from simple agricultural village life to a more socially stratified and technologically sophisticated society. The Etruscan cities of the following centuries grew directly out of Villanovan town foundations.This large, beautiful, highly polished pottery vessel offers a glimpse forward to the sophisticated Etruscan Impasto and Bucchero wares of the 7th and 6th Centuries BCE.
CULTURE / REGION OF ORIGIN: Villanovan Culture, Italy (Northern Lazio or Southern Etruria))
DATE: 8th – 7th Century BCE
DIMENSIONS: Maximum height with handle 11 cm (4.3 in.); maximum width 13.1 cm (5.1 in.); rim diameter 12.0 cm (4.7 in.)
Link to this Item: http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i41.html
![]() |
http://www.clioancientart.com/catalog/i41.html |
DESCRIPTION: A Villanovan brown Impasto Ware dipper. The vessel rests on a flat bottom, expands to its greatest width about half way up the bowl, narrows slightly, then continues vertically up to the lip. At three roughly equidistant points around the outside of the body, there are nipple-like projections. The handle is flat in section and divided into two loops. The entire surface is highly burnished, inside and out. There are three very small chips to the rim but the vessel is otherwise intact. A very nice example of the type.
PROVENANCE: Formerly in the collection of Lord Dayton of Corran, the collection formed between 1960 and 2000.
PUBLISHED: Ex Bonhams, ANTIQUITIES, 27 April 2006, London, Page 160, illustrated in color on Page 159.
COMPARISONS: Sestieri and De Santis, The Protohistory of the Latin Peoples, Electa, Rome, 2000, pages 36, 62 and 84 for examples of Villanovan Impasto Ware jugs or dippers of very similar form, with divided handles and projections on the body.
SPECIAL NOTES: The Etruscan civilization of Italy has its immediate roots in the Villanovan culture of west central Italy; an area open to influences from Greek and Carthaginian colonists and traders and northern European Celtic cultures. The Villanovan culture, centered in a broad area around the modern city of Bologna, rapidly developed from simple agricultural village life to a more socially stratified and technologically sophisticated society. The Etruscan cities of the following centuries grew directly out of Villanovan town foundations.This large, beautiful, highly polished pottery vessel offers a glimpse forward to the sophisticated Etruscan Impasto and Bucchero wares of the 7th and 6th Centuries BCE.
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