Bronze tripod

ca. 525–500 BCE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 170
The city of Vulci was famous in antiquity for its production of luxury bronzes. One popular type of item was the tripod, an elaborate stand to support either a cauldron or a brazier. Tripods were produced at Vulci for about seventy years, from about 540 to 470 B.C. This example is elaborately decorated with lion's-paw feet surmounting frogs, wild beasts attacking their prey on the arches above elegant palmette motifs, and a pair of mythical subjects at the top of each of the vertical rods. These depict the divine twins Castur and Pultuce (Greek: Kastor and Polydeukes), Hercle (Greek: Herakles) and his protectress, the goddess Menrva (Greek: Athena), and two satyrs. The three subjects do not have any obvious connections to one another. Stylistically, the execution of these small figures is similar to that of the related depictions of the divine twins on the pair of bronze volute handles (64.11.4a, b) in a nearby case.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Bronze tripod
  • Period: Archaic
  • Date: ca. 525–500 BCE
  • Culture: Etruscan
  • Medium: Bronze
  • Dimensions: H. as restored 26 in. (66.1 cm)
  • Classification: Bronzes
  • Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1960
  • Object Number: 60.11.11
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

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