Dish

Description

This luminous bowl was made using the laborious and time-consuming composition-cast mosaic glass technique. The particular combination of colors and patterns suggests that this lovely dish was created in the Eastern Mediterranean, a region that grew wealthy from trade with Asian cultures. The town homes and country houses of the local elite boasted beautifully frescoed walls, colorful mosaic floors, and lush, private gardens embellished with decorative sculptures for the sumptuous alfresco banquets that were a favorite evening pastime. This delicate mosaic glass dish was likely made to adorn a splendidly set dinner table alongside other exquisitely wrought platters, bowls, and goblets.

Provenance

Henry Oppenheimer (died 1932), London; sold, Christie’s London, July 22-23, 1936, lot 114, to Maurice Nahman, Cairo. Achille Groppi (died 1949), Cairo; bequeathed to his sister, Georgette Bianchi-Groppi, Lugano; by descent to her sons, Giacomo Bianchi, Achille Andrea Mario Bianchi, and Marco Eugenio Mario Bianchi, Lugano; sold, Christie’s, London, December 8, 1993, lot 27 [under the pseudonym Per-Neb Collection]. With Phoenix Ancient Art, by 2004; sold to The Art Institute of Chicago, 2004.

Dish

Ancient Greek

Mid 2nd-early 1st century BCE

Accession Number

184325

Medium

Glass, mosaic

Dimensions

3.2 × 13.3 cm (1 1/4 × 5 1/4 in.); Diam.: 13.3 cm (5 1/4 in.)

Classification

vessel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Katherine K. Adler Memorial Fund