ANCIENT ART

Eros
Search results: 410 images
1. ADORNMENTS. Black Sea Coast.
Wreath from Gorgippia. Detail: plate in the center depicting Aphrodite Urania with the sceptre and Eros.
Stamped gold. 2nd—mid-3rd cent. CE.
Inv. No. MD 3289.
Krasnodar, Museum of History and Archaeology.
2. ADORNMENTS. Magna Graecia.
Golden crown from Armento.
Gold. 370—360 BCE.
Munich, State Antique Collection.
3. ADORNMENTS. Greece.
The Madytos Jewelry: pair of earrings with disk and boat-shaped pendants.
Gold.
Ca. 330—300 BCE.
Inv. No. 06.1217.11—12.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
4. ADORNMENTS. Greece.
The Madytos Jewelry: pair of earrings with disk and boat-shaped pendants.
Gold.
Ca. 330—300 BCE.
Inv. No. 06.1217.11—12.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
5. ADORNMENTS. Greece.
Gold armband (one of a pair).
Greek work. Gold. Ca. 200 BCE.
Inv. No. 56.11.5.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
6. ADORNMENTS. Greece.
Gold armband (one of a pair).
Greek work. Gold. Ca. 200 BCE.
Inv. No. 56.11.6.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
7. ADORNMENTS. Greece.
Ring with carved Eros with a mask.
Gold.
Ring: Greece, 5th cent. BCE.
Depiction: Russia, 19th cent. (?).
Inv. Nos. ГР-19357 / Ж. 432.
Saint Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum.
8. APPLIED ART. Greece.
Caryatid mirror with Aphrodite.
Bronze.
Ca. 450 BCE.
Inv. No. 54.769.
Baltimore, Walters Art Museum.
9. APPLIED ART. Etruria.
The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze.
3rd century BCE.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
10. APPLIED ART. Etruria.
The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze.
Late 4th century BCE.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
11. APPLIED ART. Etruria.
The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze.
Ca. 340—330 BCE.
Made by Novios Plautios.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
12. APPLIED ART. Etruria.
The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze.
Ca. 340—330 BCE.
Made by Novios Plautios.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
13. APPLIED ART. Rome.
Sacral-idyllic landscape.
Stucco vault relief from the cubiculum B of a house beneath the Villa Farnesina.
Ca. 20 BCE.
Inv. No. 1037.
Rome, Roman National Museum, Palazzo Massimo alle Terme.
14. CERAMICS.
Guests on the symposium.
From a painting on a vase.
15. CERAMICS. Greece.
Gymnastic exercises of ephebes.
Red-figure vase.
Clay.
16. CERAMICS. Magna Graecia.
Nude Eros sitting on an altar.
Red-figure skyphoid pyxis. Sicilian work.
Attributed to the minor production if the “Gruppo Lentini Manfria”.
370—340 BCE.
Cefalu, Mandralisca Museum.
17. CERAMICS. Southern Italy.
Jason and the Golden Fleece.
Red-figured volute krater (side A). Paestum.
Ca. 340—330 BCE.
Attributed to the Apulianising Group.
Inv. No. 82126.
Naples, National Archaeological Museum.
18. CERAMICS. Greece.
Pompe, the female personification of a procession, between Eros and Dionysos.
Oinochoe. Attic.
Mid-4th cent. BCE.
Inv. No. 25.190.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
19. CERAMICS. Greece.
Eros and youth.
White-ground bobbin (side B). Attic.
Attributed to the Penthesilea Painter.
Ca. 460—450 BCE.
Inv. No. 28.167.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
20. CERAMICS. Southern Italy.
Athena with deities.
Red-figured column-krater. Apulia.
Ca. 360—350 BCE.
Attributed to the Group of Boston 00.348.
Inv. No. 50.11.4.
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.