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Capital
Column Base
Crowned Head of a Woman
Saint Savina of Troyes or Saint Syra
Head of a Grotesque
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This artwork is currently on display in Gallery 304
The marble for this relief panel probably came from a Roman sarcophagus. The slab was recarved and reused during the early Middle Ages for a church in Nola, probably to be used as a choir screen. Lions are often used as symbols for Christ in Italy during this period, but the depiction of a family with a male, a female, and suckling cub is unique.
Unidentifed church and/or private collection, Nola; Salvadore Romano, Florence (shortly after WWI until 1930); [ Brummer Gallery, Paris and New York (1930–1947)]
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