EditorialCycladic Culture. Female figurine of the Spedos variety. Early Cycladic II. Syros Phase. 2800 BC-2300 BC. Marble. Early Bronze Age. Dimensions: H: 35.5 cm. Object provenance from Naxos (?). The eyes, eyebrows, mouth and hair appear to have been modelle...
EditorialMarble male figure, Early Cycladic II, 2400?2300 B.C. or later, Cycladic, Marble, H. 14 1/8 in. (35.9 cm), Stone Sculpture, Several features of this work are unusual. Although male figures are rare, they tend to be characterized by an attribute or acti...
EditorialCycladic Culture. Female figurine of the Dokathismata variety. Early Cycladic II. Syros Phase. 2800 BC-2300 BC. Marble. Early Bronze Age. Creator: Ashmolean Master. Dimensions: h: 39,1 cm. Museum of Cycladic Art. Athens, Greece.
EditorialFemale Cycladic Idol, attributed to Goulandris Master. Early Cycladic II. 2800-2300 BC. From Island of Amorgos (Cycladic Islands). National Archaeological Museum. Athens, Greece.
EditorialMesopotamian art. Bust of a ruler, dated between 2300 and 2000 BC. Early Bronze Age. It comes from Iran (?). Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York. United States.
EditorialCycladic Art. Ancient period II. Greece. Man with a glass. Canonical style. Belongs to the Syros phase (2800-2300 b.C.). Museum of Cycladic and Ancient Greek Art. Athens. Greece.
EditorialStone mace head, possibly from Tello (ancient Girsu), southern Iraq, Kingdom of Lagash, 2400-2300 BCE. This mace head is too large to have been attached to a staff and used in battle and is probably an object dedicated in temples. An eagle grasps two l...
EditorialDouble-headed figure, 2300?2200 B.C., Ecuador, Valdivia, Ceramic, H. 3 1/2 x W. 1 1/2 in. (8.9 x 3.8 cm), Ceramics-Sculpture, Some of the earliest known works of art in western South America have been found on Ecuador's Santa Elena Peninsula, where the...
Editoriallittle bit of light gray, mottled, opaque flint with a large dark brown spot. Probably secondary updated fragment of an originally larger ax, ax, stone, flint, 7,4 x 3,05 cm, prehistory -2300.