Basin Handle with Lion Skin Attachment

98788
1 of 1
Artist
NameUnknown
Basic Info
PeriodClassical period, Early
Created inAncient & Byzantine World, Europe
Century5th century BCE
CultureGreek
Dimensions8.3 x 9.1 cm (3 1/4 x 3 9/16 in.)
Harvard Museum
DepartmentDepartment of Ancient and Byzantine Art & Numismatics
DivisionAsian and Mediterranean Art
Contactam_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu

Context

The circular-sectioned basin handle is oblong; it tapers toward the attachment plate, and there are three molded knobs on the opposite side, consisting of sharply edged knobs with a torus shape separated by hourglass-shaped sections of the handle that have a slight ridge on either side of the knob. The attachment is in the form of a flattened lion skin (1). The thickest part of the plate is at the top, where it flares into a spool-shape, with a hole on each end for the insertion of the handle. On the front, the head of a lioness is clear, with ears, eyes, muzzle, and mouth rendered in a rather globular manner, and the relief of the head is fairly flat; parts of the skin hang in small triangles on either side of the head. The back is plain. NOTES: 1. For the attachment plate compare W. Gauer, Die Bronzegefässe von Olympia: Mit Ausnahme der geometrischen Dreifüsse und der Kessel des orientalisierenden Stils, Olympische Forschungen 20 (Berlin, 1991) 203, nos. Le 216 and 217, pl. 32. The handles attached to these plates also closely match the handle of this piece. See also C. Tarditi, Vasi di bronzo in area Apula: Produzioni greche ed italiche di età arcaica e classica, Università di Lecce Dipartmento di Beni Culturali Settore storico-Archeologico Collina 8 (Lecce, 1996) 21-22 and 125, nos. 22-23. Lisa M. Anderson

TechnicalDetails

Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Transfer from the Alice Corinne McDaniel Collection, Department of the Classics, Harvard University