139 of 244 lots
139
A Large Cycladic Marble Head
Estimate: $100,000-$150,000
Passed
Live Auction
Antiquities & Ancient Art
Size
Height 5 3/4 inches (14.6 cm).
Description

A Large Cycladic Marble Head

Early Bronze Age II, Spedos Type, Keros-Syros Culture, Circa 2500-2100 B.C.

Height 5 3/4 inches (14.6 cm).

Property from a Private New England Collection

Condition
Inspected under 10x loupe and UV light. Ghost marks on proper right cheek, area of eyes, and smoothed top of head continuing onto back. Chips on top of the head. Restoration to parts of nose indicated by fluorescence under UV light. Overall weathered surface with some loss. Some gouges, notably on back side. Dark mark on back may be trace of blue pigment. Rectangular metal-surrounded hole drilled into the bottom to rest on rod of modern stand to which head is not affixed. Height with stand 13 inches (33 cm). Overall in excellent and attractive condition. See additional images. 
Provenance
Provenance:A. Sturzu, Paris, prior to 1970-2016.P. Chappey, Paris, 2016-2017.David Ghezelbash Archeologie, Paris, 8 May 2017.(Art Loss Register no. S00231632) Minimal and abstract in form, with their function still unknown, Cycladic idols have beguiled scholars and captivated the imagination of modern viewers for the last century. As a group of artworks, they are puzzling, in that they were produced almost exclusively in the craggy Aegean archipelago known as the Cyclades (the source of the Mediterranean’s finest white marble) over a span of about a thousand years, marked by a strong and remarkably uniform aesthetic. The present head is unusually large and once belonged to an exceptionally slender figure (likely female) of nearly three feet in length. The strikingly elongated shape is punctuated by a precisely carved aquiline nose, which emerges as a ridge from the otherwise featureless face. A somewhat larger example at the Getty (Acc. no. 96.AA.27) is the best parallel in terms of style and technique, preserving brightly painted patterns over the cheeks and forehead. The present example is somewhat more weathered, but enough of the original surface remains that evidence for polychromy can be detected, in the form of so-called paint “ghosts.” Faint traces around almond-shaped eyes were likely painted, and smooth areas at the top of the forehead and the back of the head likely indicate that a fugitive pigment was used for a headdress and hair.