The few examples of Roman mosaic represent a variety of techniques and subject matter.
The finest items of the Hermitage collections presented in this book give an idea of the value of the art of antiquity and its contribution to world culture.
24
Figured vessel: sphinx
Clay. Greece, Attica. 4th century B.C.
25
Athlete
Bronze. Greece, Locris. 460—450 B.C.
26
Red-figure pelike with a swallow
Clay. Greece. Attica.
27
Jug
Clay. Asia Minor. 7th century B.C.
28
Amphora with revellers (komasts)
Clay. Greece, Samos. 550—540 B.C.
29
Detail of a horse-harness with a head of Medusa
Silver. Eastern Mediterranean coast area. 1st century B.C.
30
Marble. Rome. 2nd century
31
Marble. Homan copy of Praxiteles’ original. 4th century B.C.
32
Marble. Roman copy from a Greek original. 3rd century B.C.
33
Lid of a bronze cinerary urn
Bronze. Etruria. Early 4th century B.C.
34
The tombstone of Philostrata
Marble. Greece, Attica. 5th century B.C.
35
Kylix with Helios riding in a chariot
Silver. Greece (?). First half of the 3rd century B.C.
36
Marble. Rome. 1st century
37
Marble. Rome. 3rd century
38
Marble. Roman copy of Lysippos’ original. 4th century B.C.
39
Marble. Rome. 2nd century
40
Marble. Rome. 3rd century
41
Bronze. Rome. 1st century B.C.
42
Bust of a silenus
Detail of a bronze decoration of a chariot. Thrace. Late 2nd — early 3rd century
43
Bronze statuette Kithared.
Roman copy of a Greek original. 470—460 B.C.
44
Bronze. 1st century
45
The Zeus Cameo
Sardonyx. Egypt, Alexandria. 3rd century B.C.
46
The Gonzaga Cameo with a representation of Ptolemy Philadelphus and his wife Arsinoë
Sardonyx. Egypt, Alexandria. 3rd century B.C.
47
Temple pendants with a head of Athena
Gold. Greece. 4th century B.C.
48
Bracelet
Gold. Eastern Mediterranean coast area. 3rd century
49
Terra-cotta statuette: standing girl
Greece, Tanagra. 3rd century B.C.
50
Terra-cotta statuette: two girl friends
Greece, Corinth. Second half of the 4th century B.C.
51
Mirror-stand with Aphrodite and erotes
Bronze. 5th century B.C.
52
Figured vessel
Clay. Greece, Attica. Made by Charin.
53
Amphora
Glass. Syria. Made by Ennion. 1st century
54
Vessel
Glass. Rome. 1st century
The Department of the Art and Culture of the Peoples of the East
The Department of the Art and Culture of the Peoples of the East was organized in 1920, after the October Revolution of 1917, with the active participation of three outstanding Russian Orientalists Nikolai Marr, Sergei Oldenburg and Vasily Barthold. Their pupil Iosif Orbeli became the first Head of the Department. Today the Department has one of the world’s most important collections of Oriental art.
Interest in Eastern artefacts arose in Russia long ago; the first Russian museum, Peter the Great’s
Interest in Egyptology was aroused in Russia, as in many other European countries, at the beginning of the nineteenth century. In 1826—27 the Academy of Sciences acquired the collection of the Milan merchant Francisco Castiglione (Egyptian sculptures, wooden sarcophagi and objects of the applied arts). The granite sarcophagi of Queen Nechtbasteteru and her son Aahmes, a military chief; the group sculpture of Amenemheb, the governor of Thebes, with his wife and mother; and the statue of the goddess Sekhmet, were also acquired at this time.