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Identification and Creation

Object Number
1972.314
Title
Lamp Hanger
Other Titles
Former Title: Attachment (Probably from a Hanging Lamp)
Classification
Sculpture
Work Type
sculpture
Date
2nd-3rd century CE
Places
Creation Place: Ancient & Byzantine World, Europe
Period
Roman Imperial period
Culture
Roman
Persistent Link
https://hvrd.art/o/304250

Physical Descriptions

Medium
Mixed copper alloy
Technique
Cast, lost-wax process
Dimensions
17.8 x 10.2 x 2.6 cm (7 x 4 x 1 1/16 in.)
Technical Details

Chemical Composition: ICP-MS/AAA data from sample, Mixed Copper Alloy:
Cu, 71.1; Sn, 5.62; Pb, 20.52; Zn, 2.46; Fe, 0.13; Ni, 0.04; Ag, 0.05; Sb, 0.09; As, less than 0.10; Bi, less than 0.025; Co, less than 0.005; Au, less than 0.01; Cd, less than 0.001
J. Riederer

Technical Observations: The patina is dark brown. The object has been heavily cleaned. There are broad, conspicuous scratches and metal exposed at the edges, especially on the plaque element, that are not related to the object’s ancient use or modern treatment. In each of the dolphins, there are two areas of cracks, one where the nose joins the bracket and the other near the middle of the body. The cracks are clean and sharp. The interior of one of the dolphin figures is partially filled with what appears to be remnants of core material from casting. The surface is very clean, and green copper corrosion and brown mineral deposits are preserved only in crevices and interior spaces. While there is no evidence of deep-seated corrosion, which is indicative of long-term burial, the surface is worn and presents no evidence of recent manufacture.

The object was cast by a combination of direct and indirect lost-wax methods. The dolphins and attached brackets were made by the indirect method. The interior cavity for each of them follows the contours of the exterior, as it does when molten wax is cast into a mold. The plaque element, volutes, and ring and finial were all formed separately and directly in the wax, without the use of a mold. The separate wax elements were joined to form a single wax model before being cast by lost-wax method. The result is that the dolphins and attached brackets are hollow while the rest of the hanging attachment is solid. Surface details, including hatch marks over most parts of the object and the surface details around the eyes and fins of the dolphins, seem to have been incised in the wax model. The surface decorations may have been made before the separate wax elements were joined. The hatch marks in the decorative border where the dolphins’ tail fins join are obscured by metal that seems to have been cast in and may represent poorly finished joints in the wax model. There is further evidence of a join in the wax model where one of the volutes meets the plaque border and has left the faintest indication of a join line in otherwise perfectly homogenous metal.


Amy Jones (submitted 2001)

Provenance

Recorded Ownership History
[Sotheby's (New York), The Thomas Barlow Walker Collection, Sept. 26-28, 1972, lot 298, sold]; to anonymous collection, gift; to the Fogg Museum, 1972.

Acquisition and Rights

Credit Line
Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Anonymous Gift in honor of Thomas D. Cabot
Accession Year
1972
Object Number
1972.314
Division
Asian and Mediterranean Art
Contact
am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu
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Descriptions

Published Catalogue Text: Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Bronzes at the Harvard Art Museums
In this hanging attachment, a tabula ansata with a heavy ring on a knob at the top is supported in the center by the joined tails or caudal fins of two dolphins and on the sides by volutes that rest on the heads of the dolphins. A rudimentary palmette hangs below the point where the dolphins’ tails come together. The bodies of the dolphins are hollow on the underside. The nose of each dolphin is flattened to rest on a rectangular socket (2.1 x 1.9 cm and 2.3 x 1.75 cm) with upper and lower moldings and attachment holes (4.5 mm) in front and back so that a pin could go directly through.

The upper and lower moldings of the tabula ansata, bases, and volutes are decorated with slanted, parallel hatches. The spaces between the handles and the framing molding of the tabula ansata are triangular; there is no trace of an inscription.

The stylized dolphins have depressed, fish-like eyes with raised pupils. One has a pectoral fin and flukes below the head; the other has a knob rather than a fin on the head and a row of bumps below.

A very similar device that suspended a double piriform lamp, with more graceful and finely modeled dolphins, was found at Herculaneum (1). The Harvard lamp hanger is larger and heavier and could have supported a lamp with five or six lights, such as 1990.71, or a polycandelon. The similarity of the opening formed by the curved back of the dolphins and the volutes to a rein guide on a wagon or chariot has been noted, but the best parallels are found in connection with lamps (2). A lamp hanger of similar dimensions in the Malcove collection has identically arranged elements, but the tabula is more elongated and the dolphins are less natural, rendered almost like sea monsters. The tabula is inscribed with a dedication in letters whose forms C. P. Jones dates between the late second and early fourth centuries CE (3).

NOTES:

1. See M. Conticello de’ Spagnolis and E. De Carolis, Le lucerne di bronzo di Ercolano e Pompei (Rome, 1988) 139, 146, and 184, no. 120.

2. See D. M. Bailey, A Catalogue of Lamps in the British Museum 4: Lamps of Metal and Stone, and Lampstands (London, 1996) no. Q3649, pls. 35-37, a very heavy and elegant first-century CE example in the British Museum, excavated from the Cluny baths in Paris; for the original illustration of this lamp and dolphin hanger and the objects found with it, see J. Bonnet, P. Velay, and P. Forni, Les bronzes antiques de Paris, Collections du Musée Carnavalet (Paris, 1989) 270-71, no. 405, figs. 30-31, pls. 401-403.

3. Compare S. D. Campbell, The Malcove Collection: A Catalogue of the Objects in the Lillian Malcove Collection of the University of Toronto (Toronto, 1985) 54, no. 49, which is described as a “lamp hanger” and “possibly for a large bronze polycandelon” dated as early as the third and as late as the sixth century CE, although Jones dates the letter forms slightly earlier. Clay examples of lamp hangers with dolphins—imported and local ware—dated to the first to early second centuries CE have been found at Pergamon; see A. Heimerl, Die römischen Lampen aus Pergamon vom Beginn der Kaiserzeit bis zum Ende des 4. Jhs. n. Chr., Pergamenische Forschungen 13 (Berlin, 2001) 65-66, 70, 158, and 180; nos. 751 and 1036-37; pls. 18 and 22 (no. 1036 is inscribed on both sides). For references on tabulae ansatae, see P. N. Hunt, “Bronze Votive Tabulae Ansatae at Summus Poeninus in the Roman Alps,” in From the Parts to the Whole: Acta of the 13th International Bronze Congress, held at Cambridge, Massachusetts, May 28-June 1, 1996, eds. C. C. Mattusch, A Brauer, and S. E. Knudsen (Portsmouth, RI, 2002) 2: 233-40, esp. 233, where he notes that “bronze examples are among the earliest extant forms, dating to the Julio-Claudian era.” Hunt also notes a Tiberian bronze example in the Ashmolean Museum with chain loops for hanging; see ibid., 233 (CIL IX 1456).


Jane Ayer Scott

Publication History

  • Ruth Bielfeldt, "The Lure and Lore of Light: Roman Lamps in the Harvard Art Museums", Ancient Bronzes through a Modern Lens: Introductory Essays on the Study of Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Bronzes, ed. Susanne Ebbinghaus, Harvard Art Museums (Cambridge, MA, 2014), 170-91, pp. 183-84, fig. 8.6.
  • Susanne Ebbinghaus, ed., Ancient Bronzes through a Modern Lens: Introductory Essays on the Study of Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Bronzes, Harvard Art Museum/Yale University Press (Cambridge, MA, 2014), pp. 78, 183-184, fig. 8.6

Subjects and Contexts

  • Ancient Bronzes

Verification Level

This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of Asian and Mediterranean Art at am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu