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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.
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2. ADORNMENTS. Magna Graecia. Golden crown from Armento.
Gold. 370—360 BCE.
Munich, State Antique Collection.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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8. APPLIED ART. Greece. Caryatid mirror with Aphrodite.
Bronze. Ca. 450 BCE.
Inv. No. 54.769. Baltimore, Walters Art Museum.
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9. APPLIED ART. Etruria. The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze. 3rd century BCE.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
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10. APPLIED ART. Etruria. The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze. Late 4th century BCE.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
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11. APPLIED ART. Etruria. The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze. Ca. 340—330 BCE. Made by Novios Plautios.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
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12. APPLIED ART. Etruria. The Ficoroni Cista.
Bronze. Ca. 340—330 BCE. Made by Novios Plautios.
Rome, National Etruscan Museum of Villa Julia.
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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.
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14. CERAMICS. Guests on the symposium.
From a painting on a vase.
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15. CERAMICS. Greece. Gymnastic exercises of ephebes.
Red-figure vase. Clay.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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