Greece, Cycladic culture, probably Early Cycladic, ca. 3200 to 2800 BCE. A fine example of a famous and rare ancient form, the kandila. This is a hollowed out, roughly spheroid bowl standing on a flaring pedestal foot. Four lug handles stud the sides, each roughly 90 degrees from the next. The neck is large and cylindrical, rounded, unpronounced rim around the mouth. The surface has been smoothed, probably using sandstone, and is a warm brown marble color with a reddish tinge from earthen deposits. This type of vessel is so named because it bears a strong resemblance to Greek church lamps. They seem to have been very popular forms during the Early Cycladic I period. They were made to hold liquids like oil or wine and could be suspended for storage from the holes drilled through the handles. Size: 7.25" W x 8.95" H (18.4 cm x 22.7 cm)
The Cycladic Islands, located in the southwestern Aegean Sea, are rich in mineral resources, and as the Early Bronze Age began, ca. 3000 BCE, their iron and copper ores created local wealth. Artisans worked in stone, creating beautiful vessels like this one and the mysterious marble idols known as kilia. These marble objects ultimately wound up in tombs, and they have been found in burial sites in varying quantities - suggesting social stratification based on personal wealth, an important development in the formation of societies. The surface of these marble objects would have been painted with bright mineral pigments - blue azurite and red cinnabar.
A similar example hammered for GBP 21,250 ($29,863.58) at Christie's, London, South Kensington "Antiquities" auction (sale 7207, October 24, 2012, lot 79), and another with a spherical body hammered for $269,000 at Christie's, New York "Antiquities" auction (sale 2856, June 4, 2014, lot 61).
Provenance: East Coast, USA collection; ex major New York Gallery before 2011
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#146579
Condition
Expertly repaired and restored from approximately ten medium-to-large pieces. With added adhesive residue and pigment along the break lines. Weathering on stone surface with some small chips and scratches commensurate with age and deposits overall.