Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Lamp

View through Harvard Museums
Mold made lamp. Flat base delineated by a worn circular groove. Fairly deep reservoir with minimally curving, flaring walls. Narrow rim slopes downward. Three grooves separate rim from concave discus. On the discus, a monkey, shown in profile, with a long, curving tail stands on a grape vine reaching for and eating its fruit. The vine extends from the lower portion of the discus along the right side and to the top of the discus. Filling hole below center, chipped around its edges. Doughy double volute nozzle is relatively long and has a rounded tip. Small air hole between volutes just below rim. Volutes extend into darts, in reliev, along the side of nozzle. No handle. Pale tan, delicate fabric with very small inclusions and some mica. Slip mostly worn away, but preserved areas show that the slip color ranged from chocolate brown to bright orange. Thin walls.
Department of Ancient and Byzantine Art & Numismatics Lent by the Misses Katherine B. and Mary D. Upham March 14 1908. Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum Loan from Estate of Donald Upham and Mrs. R. U. Hunter
image-zoom
Title: Lamp
Description:
Mold made lamp.
Flat base delineated by a worn circular groove.
Fairly deep reservoir with minimally curving, flaring walls.
Narrow rim slopes downward.
Three grooves separate rim from concave discus.
On the discus, a monkey, shown in profile, with a long, curving tail stands on a grape vine reaching for and eating its fruit.
The vine extends from the lower portion of the discus along the right side and to the top of the discus.
Filling hole below center, chipped around its edges.
Doughy double volute nozzle is relatively long and has a rounded tip.
Small air hole between volutes just below rim.
Volutes extend into darts, in reliev, along the side of nozzle.
No handle.
Pale tan, delicate fabric with very small inclusions and some mica.
Slip mostly worn away, but preserved areas show that the slip color ranged from chocolate brown to bright orange.
Thin walls.

Related Results

Lamp with Warrior on Discus
Lamp with Warrior on Discus
Red varnished terracotta lamp most likely from the late 1st century to 2nd century CE. It is similar to types found in Roman North Africa. The lamp is almost completely circular an...
Lamp: human figure crouching over phallus
Lamp: human figure crouching over phallus
Mold made lamp. Material is soft, well-levigated light-gray clay with micaceous impurities. Has a reddish brown glaze. Nozzle is coated with carbon. Designed for suspension with tw...
Lamp: Black African crouching over phallus
Lamp: Black African crouching over phallus
Mold made lamp. Material is soft, well-levigated light-gray clay with micaceous impurities. Has a reddish brown glaze. Nozzle is coated with carbon. Designed for suspension with tw...
Lamp: erotic scene
Lamp: erotic scene
Mold-made lamp with voluted nozzle, most of which is broken. The lamp stands on a circular, flat base. The shoulder is rounded, and the rim is small and plain with a single groove ...
Lamp
Lamp
Wheelmade lamp of the so-called cocked-hat type. Small bowl with two sides pinched together to form a wick rest. Narrow, low, unfinished base with string marks. Red-orange fabric ...
Lamp with Chi-Rho Monogram
Lamp with Chi-Rho Monogram
Mold-made, terracotta lamp: oval body with long nozzle, now broken, with wide shallow channel between the wick hole and the filling hole; traces of burning on the mouth. The handle...
Roman Lamp Discus
Roman Lamp Discus
Rim, discus, and very upper part of volute nozzle of mold made lamp. Narrow rim is almost horizontal and has two narrow ridges. Concave discus with faint set of ridges just below r...
Ceramic Plaque with mihrab motif framed by inscription in relief
Ceramic Plaque with mihrab motif framed by inscription in relief
The niche in the center of this turquoise plaque references a mihrab—the marker within a mosque that signals the qibla, that is, the direction toward the city of Mecca. Muslims are...

Back to Top