Main Menu

Hemispherical Bowl

Skip to main content
Collections Menu
Image Not Available for Hemispherical Bowl
Hemispherical Bowl
Image Not Available for Hemispherical Bowl

Hemispherical Bowl

Place of OriginIran
DateLate 6th - 5th century BC
Dimensions3 × 4 × 4 in. (7.6 × 10.2 × 10.2 cm)
Rim: 4 in. (10.2 cm)
MediumSilver, hammered from a sheet of silver, with appliqués.
ClassificationMetalwork
Credit LinePurchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey, by exchange
Object number
2008.121
On View
Toledo Museum of Art (2445 Monroe Street), Gallery, 02, Classic
Collections
  • Decorative Arts
Published ReferencesAntiquities, Christie's, New York, sale no. 2007, 4 June 2008, p. 89, lot 88. Cf. John Curtis and Nigel Tallis, eds., Forgotten Empire: The World of Ancient Persia (Berkeley and London: University of California Press, 2005), p. 118, no. 111, British Museum hemispherical silver bowl from the Oxus Treasure, purchased in 1966, formerly in the Spencer-Churchill Collection (British Museum inv. MC 134740). See especially St John Simpson, Chapter 6, "The Royal Table," pp. 104-131; p. 109 fig. 49 shows a figure carrying a pair of hemispherical bowls in his hands. Cf. Dorothea Arnold et al., Ancient Art from the Shumei Family Collection, exhibition catalogue (New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1996) 44-45, no. 17, hemispherical bowl with gold appliqués, Diam 3 ½ in. (9 cm), weight 197.4 g (Nancy Thomas). Cf. John Curtis, Ancient Persia-1 (London, The British Museum Press, 2000) fig. 6.3, inv. ME 134740, hemispherical silver bowl with two rows of gold appliqué figures, Diam. 4 in. (10.3 cm), weight 188 g, inv. No. ANE 134740, part of the 5th-4th c. B.C. Oxus Treasure, discovered in 1877 in the region of Takht-i Kuwad, Tadjikistan (ancient Bactria), xxx objects bequeathed in 1897 by A.W. Franks to the British Museum. Cf. John Boardman, Persia and the West: An Archaeological Investigation of the Genesis of Achaemenid Art (New York and London: Thames & Hudson, 2000), "Metalwork" pp. 184-194.Cf. Ilknur Özgen and Jean Öztürk et al., Heritage Recovered: The Lydian Treasure (Ankara: Ministry of Culture, 1996) no. 33, hemispherical silver bowl in the Lydian Treasure. Cf. Ann C. Gunter and Paul Jett, Ancient Iranian Metalwork in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and the Freer Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C., 1992) re shapes and decoration, and materials and methods of manufacture; no close comparisons. Cf. Edith Porada, The Art of Ancient Iran: Pre-Islamic Cultures (New York: Crown Publishers, 1965) pp. 164-170 and pls. 48, 49, and 50 (ibexes). Cf. Roman Ghirshman, The Arts of Ancient Iran: From its Origins to the Time of Alexander the Great (New York: Golden Press, 1964) pp. 243-275 "Achaemenian Persia: Sumptuary and Industrial Arts"Label TextHammered out from a single sheet of silver, this drinking bowl is also decorated with applied silver cutouts of leaping ibexes and hares. Made to fit comfortably in the hand, such elegant bowls made of precious metals and decorated with hunting motifs would have been used by the elite governors (or satraps) of the Achaemenid Persian Empire—the largest empire the ancient world had yet seen, centering on what is now Iran and stretching from modern Turkey to India.

Membership

Become a TMA member today

Support TMA

Help support the TMA mission