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Detail of a Limestone Funerary Stele with a Cypriot Capital in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2010

Detail of a Limestone Funerary Stele with a Cypriot Capital in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, July 2010
Title: Limestone funerary stele (shaft) with a "Cypriot capital"

Medium; Technique: Limestone

Culture: Cypriot

Period: Classical

Date: 5th century B.C.

Dimensions: Overall: 54 x 32in. (137.1 x 81.3cm)

Credit Line: The Cesnola Collection, Purchased by subscription, 1874–76

Accession Number: 74.51.2493

On View


Description:

Rectangular shafts topped by capitals such as this were carved on Cyprus from the seventh through the fifth centuries B.C. Most come from Golgoi or Idalion. The capital is composed of several motifs that were well known in the eastern Mediterranean world. An Aeolic capital, marked by two volutes emerging from a triangular base, serves as support for two pairs of curving fronds between which rises a "tree of life" flanked by sphinxes. The Aeolic-style capital derived from floral motifs that go back in date to the Bronze Age. The earliest known stone capitals of this type date to the tenth to ninth century B.C. and were found in Palestine. They were apparently influenced by Phoenician examples, and it may well have been the Phoenicians who brought the motif to Cyprus. The symmetrical, stylized "tree of life" motif also originated in the Bronze Age and was used in a wide variety of media throughout the eastern Mediterranean area. Both motifs have connotations of fertility and the renovation of nature.

Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/collection_database/greek_...

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