LOT 33 Eastern Greek Carnelian Scarab Seal
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6th-5th century B.C. Modelled with semi-naturalistic anatomical detailing, the base displaying a battle showing a mature and muscular naked man grappling with a winged gryphon; drilled for suspension. Cf. aparable scene in Boardman, J., Greek Gems and finger rings, early Bronze Age to Late Classical, London, 1973 (2001), grams, 16 mm (5/8 in.). Ex F.A., Brussels, 1980. Private collection of a London antiquarian. The presence of Greek scene of a fight between a man and a gryphon is not unusual in scarabs. A faience factory was found in Naukratis by Flinders-Petrie, with innumerable faience and discarded moulds. The motifs on the bottom surface are repetitive and hurriedly worked. They depict lucky symbols or representative subjects (lions with sun disc, ibex, Horus falcons, lotus flowers), such motifs had already been adopted into Greek art but are generally considered typically Egyptian. Here the subject of a fight against a gryphon is Greek, although the style of the fighting character seems Phoenician, which points to Eastern Mediterranean workman, possibly on the Island of Rhodes.
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