Myrtle Wreath

CultureGreek (Corinthian)
Titles
  • Myrtle Wreath
Date330–250 BC
MediumGold
Dimensionsdiameter × depth: 12 × 1 3/8 inches (30.5 × 3.5 cm)

Credit LineGift of Miss Annette Finnigan
Object number37.5
Current Location
The Audrey Jones Beck Building
200 Jamail Atrium
Exposé

Explore Further

Department
Antiquities
Description

In ancient Greece, wreaths made from plants like laurel, ivy, and myrtle were awarded to athletes, soldiers, and royalty. Similar wreaths were designed in gold and silver for the same purposes or for religious functions. This example conveys the language of love.


A plant sacred to the goddess Aphrodite, myrtle was a symbol of love. Greeks wore wreaths made of real myrtle leaves at weddings and banquets, received them as athletic prizes and awards for military victories, and wore them as crowns to show royal status.


By the Hellenistic period (300–30 BC), the wreaths were made of gold foil; too fragile to be worn, they were created primarily to be buried with the dead as symbols of life’s victories. The naturalistic myrtle leaves and blossoms on this wreath were cut from thin sheets of gold, exquisitely finished with stamped and incised details, and then wired onto the stems. Most that survive today were found in graves.


 


Provenance[Theodore Zoumpoulakis, Athens, by 1935]; purchased by Miss Annette Finnigan (1873–1940), Houston, 1935–1937; given to MFAH, 1937.
Exhibition History"Ten Centuries that Shaped the West," The Rice Institute for the Arts, Houston, October 15, 1970–January 3, 1971; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, February 3–April 1, 1971; Witte Memorial Museum, San Antonio, May 16–July 11, 1971.

"Alexander the Great King of the Macedonians," Onassis Cultural Center, New York, December 9, 2004–May 28, 2005.

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

If you have questions about this work of art or the MFAH Online Collection please contact us.

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