Earring thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Jewellery, Rooms 91, The William and Judith Bollinger Gallery

Earring

350 BC-300 BC (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The lion-heads are formed in sheet gold halves (left and right) and are carefully detailled. There eyes were probably once enamelled in blue as is still visible on a similar example now in the Metropolitan Museum New York. The loop connecting the lion is elaboratly decorated with filigree. This concentration of filigree decoration and this type of earring terminating in an animal head are typical of the production in the Greek cities of South Italy and Sicily, Taranto in particular.
Representations of woman wearing similar earrings on terracottas and bronze mirrors suggest that most of these double-headed earrings were worn by pushing the smaller head through the perforation in the earlobe from behind, the larger head being at the front but upside-down.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Gold
Brief description
Earring, gold, decorated with lion heads, Southern Italy or Sicily (Magna Graecia), about 350-300 BC
Physical description
Earring, gold, decorated with lion heads
Dimensions
  • Height: 3.7cm
  • Width: 2.3cm
  • Depth: 2.9cm
Style
Object history
Castellani Collection
Production
Probably made in Magna Graecia (Southern Italy or Sicily)
Subjects depicted
Summary
The lion-heads are formed in sheet gold halves (left and right) and are carefully detailled. There eyes were probably once enamelled in blue as is still visible on a similar example now in the Metropolitan Museum New York. The loop connecting the lion is elaboratly decorated with filigree. This concentration of filigree decoration and this type of earring terminating in an animal head are typical of the production in the Greek cities of South Italy and Sicily, Taranto in particular.
Representations of woman wearing similar earrings on terracottas and bronze mirrors suggest that most of these double-headed earrings were worn by pushing the smaller head through the perforation in the earlobe from behind, the larger head being at the front but upside-down.
Collection
Accession number
624-1884

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Record createdApril 20, 2005
Record URL
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