Sunday, April 22, 2012

Mastery of Design: The Hand Pinching an Ear Ring, 150-200CE


Intaglio Ring
150-200
The Victoria & Albert Museum


Engraved and carved gemstones have been  employed in jewels since ancient Greece in the 8th century BC and earlier. The art developed over time into cameos and intaglios. 

This Roman imperial intaglio depicts a hand, reaching out to pinch an ear, and would have been intended as a gift to a loved.  What exactly does this motif mean?  Historically, a hand pinching or touching an ear was meant to symbolize a stimulus to memory, thought to derive from the writings on natural history by Pliny the Elder.  It’s a fairly common theme in Roman gems, and the Greek inscription of “MNHM/O/NEYE” translates as “Remember.”

The intaglio is crafted from a translucent, deep-red carnelian.  It dates between 150-200 CE.

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