Hanging with Dionysian Figures
Leafy tendrils frame twelve (originally fifteen) busts of satyrs, maenads, and others who attended the wine god Dionysos during his thiasoi, or revels. His tutor, Silenus is the bald man at the lower right. Herakles appears as the bearded man at upper left. The two figures with horns in the second row may be Pan and one of his sons who, according to Nonnus of Panopolis, assisted Dionysos in his conquest of India. The women are amongst the maenads who attended him. These mythological figures are typical of the continuity of interest in classical learning and culture in the Byzantine world, including Egypt.
Artwork Details
- Title: Hanging with Dionysian Figures
- Date: 5th–7th century
- Geography: Said to be from Egypt, Antinopolis
- Medium: Linen, wool; tapestry-woven
- Dimensions: Textile: L. 25 1/2 in. (64.8 cm)
W. 58 in. (147.3 cm)
Mount: H. 41 1/4 in. (104.8 cm)
W. 62 3/4 in. (159.4 cm)
D. 1 1/4 in. (3.2 cm) - Classification: Textiles-Woven
- Credit Line: Gift of Edward S. Harkness, 1931
- Object Number: 31.9.3
- Curatorial Department: Islamic Art
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