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Source Description

This pyriform blown glass jug sits on a flat base with a cylindrical neck that flares out to a funnel shaped mouth. The handle was separately created and joins the body of the vessel to the mouth, with an upwardly projecting thumb rest at the rim. The multi-colored, swirling surface of this jug, or "marbling" effect, was used frequently in 1st century CE Roman glass production. It evoked the colorful and expensive marble that was flooding into Rome from around the Empire during this period, which was used by the elite to decorate everything from private houses to elaborate public temples. Such small tear-shaped glass jugs were popular throughout the Mediterranean world and were commonly used as perfume bottles. The marbled decoration, indicating an origin in the eastern Mediterranean, could have made the piece appealing to a 17th-century collector.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
17996
label
Jug
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
17996
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Jug
description
This pyriform blown glass jug sits on a flat base with a cylindrical neck that flares out to a funnel shaped mouth. The handle was separately created and joins the body of the vessel to the mouth, with an upwardly projecting thumb rest at the rim. The multi-colored, swirling surface of this jug, or "marbling" effect, was used frequently in 1st century CE Roman glass production. It evoked the colorful and expensive marble that was flooding into Rome from around the Empire during this period, which was used by the elite to decorate everything from private houses to elaborate public temples. Such small tear-shaped glass jugs were popular throughout the Mediterranean world and were commonly used as perfume bottles. The marbled decoration, indicating an origin in the eastern Mediterranean, could have made the piece appealing to a 17th-century collector.
provenance
Dikran Kelekian, Paris and New York [date and mode of acquisition unknown] [said to be from Syria]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1928, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.
date
1st century CE (Roman Imperial)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
jugs
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
H: 4 in. (10.1 cm)
Source extras
cul
Roman
med
glass, free blown
creator_ids
6191
collection_ids
ROM
exhibition_ids
454
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
6e9a5cbd362ffc4b