Etruscan Art in the Metropolitan Museum

Etruscan Art in The Metropolitan Museum

De Puma, Richard, and Christopher Lightfoot
2013
336 pages
Honorable Mention, Los Angeles Book Festival (2014)
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The Metropolitan Museum's outstanding collection of ancient Etruscan art includes over one thousand objects dating from about 900 B.C. to about 100 B.C. They have been acquired either in groups or individually since the first group of Etruscan vases was donated in 1875 by Luigi Palma di Cesnola, the Museum's first director from 1879 to 1904. In 2007, the Department of Greek and Roman Art updated and greatly enhanced the display of Etruscan art with the opening of a reinstalled permanent gallery devoted to more than 550 of the most important works from pre-Roman Italy, assembled on the mezzanine that overlooks the new Leon Levy and Shelby White Court. In addition, the adjacent Study Collection gallery that covers all aspects of the collection of the Museum's Department of Greek and Roman Art holds another 150 objects from ancient Etruria.

Now, the collection is thoroughly documented in print, combining the most up-to-date scholarship with brilliant digital photography. Many of the objects had never been published before or only many decades ago. In addition, visual and textual information on these works has been augmented digitally on the Museum's ever-expanding website.

The art of ancient Etruria retains its fascination even to the modern age. Artists and writers—notably Alberto Giacometti and D. H. Lawrence—have found inspiration in these intriguing objects. Contemporary artists, scholars, and the Metropolitan Museum's broad public will now benefit greatly from this informative volume on these extraordinary works of art.

Met Art in Publication

Terracotta vase in the shape of a cockerel, Terracotta, Etruscan
ca. 650–600 BCE
Terracotta inscribed alabastron (perfume vase), Terracotta, Etruscan, Etrusco-Corinthian
ca. 600 BCE
Terracotta bowl fragments with graffito inscription, Terracotta, Etruscan
ca. 3rd century BCE
Bronze thymiaterion (incense burner) with Marsyas, Bronze, Etruscan
late 4th century BCE
Banded agate scarab, Agate, Etruscan
5th century BCE
Bronze disc-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
10th century BCE
Bronze disc-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
9th–8th century BCE
Bronze dragon-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Late Villanovan or Early Etruscan
ca. 700–650 BCE
Bronze dragon-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
7th–early 6th century BCE
Bronze dragon-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
7th–early 6th century BCE
Bronze dragon-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
7th–early 6th century BCE
Bronze bow fibula (safety pin) with four ducks, Bronze, Villanovan
ca. 900 BCE
Bronze fibula (safety pin) with four rings, Bronze, Italic
9th century BCE
Bronze bow-shaped fibula (safety pin) with bone cylinder, Bronze, bone, Italic
8th century BCE
Bronze navicella-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Early Etruscan
8th–7th century BCE
Bronze navicella-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
8th century BCE
Bronze sanguisuga-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Italic
8th–7th century BCE
Bronze sanguisuga-type fibula, Bronze, Italic, Villanovan
8th–7th century BCE
Bronze sanguisuga-type fibula (safety pin), Bronze, Etruscan
7th century BCE
Gold sanguisuga-type fibulae (safety pins) with glass paste bows, Gold, glass, Etruscan
late 8th–early 7th century BCE
Showing 20 of 630

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De Puma, Richard Daniel. 2013. Etruscan Art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York New Haven: Metropolitan Museum of Art Distributed by Yale University Press.