Rosette thumbnail 1
Rosette thumbnail 2

Rosette

530 BC-500 BC (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In central Italy, the artistic imagination of the Etruscan jewellers was at its height between 700 and 400 BC. Trade with the East played a decisive role in the economic power of the Etruscans and influenced the design of their jewellery. Etruscan goldsmiths were highly skilled, particularly in their use of granulation (powder-like gold grains used ornamentally) and filigree (fine wires). Motifs such as acorns, lotus, palmettes, sphinxes and lions were foreign imports but there were also local types, such as the bag-shaped (a baule) and grape-cluster (a grapollo) earrings.

This is one of a pair of gold rosettes (museum number 8839-1863). It is decorated with granulation, where tiny spheres of gold are arranged in patterns on the surface. They are fixed to the background by an intricate process which creates a join without using solder.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Gold, decorated with embossed work and granulation
Brief description
Rosette, decorated with embossed work and granulation, possibly made in Tuscany or Umbria, 530-500BC
Physical description
Gold, decorated with embossed work and granulation
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 4.1cm
  • Depth: 0.4cm
Style
Gallery label
(2007)
Disc earrings
Italy, Tuscany (Etruria), about 530-500 BC
Embossed gold, with granulation
Museum nos. 8838, 8839-1863
Production
Made in Etruria, the ancient state in west-central Italy which spread its civilization throughout Italy in the 6th century B.C. It is now part of modern Tuscany and Umbria.
Subject depicted
Summary
In central Italy, the artistic imagination of the Etruscan jewellers was at its height between 700 and 400 BC. Trade with the East played a decisive role in the economic power of the Etruscans and influenced the design of their jewellery. Etruscan goldsmiths were highly skilled, particularly in their use of granulation (powder-like gold grains used ornamentally) and filigree (fine wires). Motifs such as acorns, lotus, palmettes, sphinxes and lions were foreign imports but there were also local types, such as the bag-shaped (a baule) and grape-cluster (a grapollo) earrings.

This is one of a pair of gold rosettes (museum number 8839-1863). It is decorated with granulation, where tiny spheres of gold are arranged in patterns on the surface. They are fixed to the background by an intricate process which creates a join without using solder.
Associated object
8839-1863 (Set)
Collection
Accession number
8838-1863

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Record createdApril 11, 2005
Record URL
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