September 2021 Auction - TimeLine Auctions

Page 46

74

75 74

ROMAN RAM'S HEAD FINIAL 5th-6th century AD An expertly carved marble head of a ram, originally part of a bigger sculpture, natural facial detailing with large almond-shaped eyes, the pupils with a recess for an inlay for the iris; the fleece with drilled locks; long curving horns with incised detailing; mounted on a custom-made display stand. 1.4 kg total, 21cm including stand (8¼"). Fine condition. £30,000 - 40,000 EUR 34,970 - 46,630 USD 41,250 - 55,000 Provenance Property of a London gentleman; before that in the private collection of a Kensington collector; acquired from the private collection of Dr. Heinz Johanik, Austria, since 1970; accompanied by an academic expertise by Dr. Raffaele D’Amato and a geological scholarly report no.TL05387 by Dr Ronald Bonewitz; this lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate number no.10400-178135. Literature See Mendel, G., Catalogue des sculptures grecques, romaines et byzantines, Constantinople, 1914, nos.21 (125), vol.I, p.102, for the sculpture of a ram’s head in similar style under the paws of a sphinx; vol.I, p.102; Grabar, A., L’Arte Paleocristiana, Milano, 1967. Footnotes The ram was the symbol of male strength and virility and was a commonly sacrificial animal from prehistory onwards. A ram's head appears next to the head of an ox or bull in a Graeco-Persian stele from the 5th century BC (Mendel, 1966, III, p.374, no.1357). Symbol of Hermes, god of thieves, the ram's head frequently occurs in representations of sarcophagi and dedicatory steles from the Roman period, especially from the 2nd century AD. In the famous sarcophagus of Phaedra and Hippolytus, at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum, a sphinx holds the head of such a ram in its clutches, as well as in the Dionysian sarcophagus of the same museum. Four ram heads decorate the four corners of an altar dedicated to Nemesis, from Miletus (Mendel, 1966, III, p.78, no.864), a ram, with a similar pronounced head,

44

accompanies the god Hermes in a statue of the 2nd century (Mendel, 1966, II, p.79, no.316) and the sacrificial animal becomes the primary subject of Asian steles to the deities (Mendel, 1966, III, nos.849-850-852-856). Ram heads decorate the cymatia of the Roman imperial armour of the middle period (Mendel, 1966, III, p.346, no.1108; no.1373 p.585), but appears also in capitals (Mendel, 1966, II, p. 341, no.744; III, nos. 1210-1213), early Christian reliefs, sarcophagi and sculptures, as a tribute to the scene of the sacrifice of Isaac (Mendel, 1966, II, p.474, no.674), prow of ships (Mendel, 1966, II, p.431, no.655), or related to the new vision of the leader of the flock hold by the Good Shepherd (Mendel, 1966, II, nos.648-650, pp. 412ff.; Grabar, 1967, figs. 127,134,266,287,301,303). In turn, this iconography certainly derives from that of Hermes carrying a ram on his shoulders (Kriophoros), being the famous Kriophoros of Salamis the original prototype, from which numerous copies were made in Roman times.

75

ROMAN MARBLE STATUE FOOT PAIR 2nd century AD A pair of marble feet from a statue, each naturalistically modelled with detailed toes and nails; each resting on a rectangular plinth, later cut from the original base of the statue. 5.5 kg total, 20.5cm each (8"). Fine condition. [2] £10,000 - 14,000 EUR 11,660 - 16,320 USD 13,750 - 19,250 Provenance From an important English collection; previously acquired on the German art market in 2012; formerly in an old private English collection; accompanied by an archaeological expertise by Dr. Raffaele D’Amato; both objects have been checked against the Art Loss Register Database (right foot 870173, left foot 870171) and the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate number no.10765-177430. Literature See various examples in Reinach, S., Répertoire de la statuaire grecque et romaine, Paris, 1897-1930.

For charges payable in addition to the final hammer price of each Lot see paragraphs 19 & 26 of buyer's T&C's


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.