Marble vase with high foot and lug handles

ca. 2700–2400/2300 BCE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 151
On loan to The Met
This work of art is currently on loan to the museum.
Technical analysis: Ultraviolet-induced visible luminescence examination, optical microscopy


This beautifully crafted collared jar with a hemispherical body set on an outsplayed pedestal base and with a broad conical collar with everted rim set off from body by a groove is evolved from the Early Cycladic I footed collared jar, or kandila. Three rectangular unpierced horizontal lugs are placed equidistant at the widest part of body. Two more rectangular pierced horizontal lugs are set opposite each other midway up the collar. It is complete and restored with losses at the rim and base and three of the five lugs. Pale brown accretion covers the vessel in varying degrees. Apart from the weathered/repaired rim and foot and losses in general, the marble is smooth and intact where visible. This is an extraordinary work of fine craftsmanship that would have had a flat circular marble lid, like the very similar complete example from Naxos, but nearly twice its size. (1) The pottery version of this form, see L.2022.38.159, is a very common grave good in the Early Cycladic II period, rarely found in settlements.


Sandy MacGillivray and Wendy Walker


(1) See, Getz-Gentle, P. Stone Vessels of the Cyclades in the Early Bronze Age: Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996, 297-8 N5, Pl. VIIIA, fig.97b; from Naxos, NAM 6133.2.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Marble vase with high foot and lug handles
  • Period: Early Cycladic II
  • Date: ca. 2700–2400/2300 BCE
  • Culture: Cycladic
  • Medium: Marble
  • Dimensions: Height: 7 11/16 in. (19.5 cm)
    Width: 7 13/16 in. (19.8 cm)
    Diameter: 7 9/16 in. (19.2 cm)
    Thickness: 1/4 in. (.6 cm)
  • Classification: Stone Sculpture
  • Credit Line: Leonard N. Stern Collection, Loan from the Hellenic Republic, Ministry of Culture
  • Object Number: L.2022.38.117
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art