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NEWS FROM THE GETTY news.getty.edu | [email protected]

DATE: May 8, 2019 MEDIA CONTACT FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Desiree Zenowich Getty Communications (310) 440-7304 [email protected]

GETTY MUSEUM ACQUIRES COLLECTION OF ANCIENT ENGRAVED GEMS

Marlborough Antinous - A Roman Portrait of - A Roman A Greek Mottled Red Jasper A Minoan Blue Chalcedony Black Chalcedony Intaglio Portrait of Amethyst Ringstone with a Portrait Scaraboid with Perseus Tabloid Seal with Three Swans Antinous, circa 130-138 A.D. of Demosthenes signed by Classical Period, circa 4th Late Palace Period, circa 16th Dioskourides, circa late B.C. century B.C. B.C.

LOS ANGELES – The J. Paul Getty Museum acquired at auction last week a group of seventeen ancient engraved gems from the collection of Roman art dealer Giorgio Sangiorgi (1886-1965). The great majority of the Sangiorgi gems were acquired before World War II, and many derive from notable earlier collections amassed by Lelio Pasqualini, the Boncompagni-Ludovisi family, the Duke of Marlborough, and Paul Arndt in Munich. Comprising some of the finest classical gems still in private hands, the Sangiorgi gems were brought to Switzerland in the 1950s and have remained there with his heirs until now. The group acquired by the Getty includes Greek gems of the Minoan, Archaic and Classical periods, as well as Etruscan and Roman gems, some of which are in their original gold rings. They have never been on public view and were only recently published for the first time in Masterpieces in Miniature. Engraved Gems from Prehistory to the Present ( and New York, 2018) by Claudia Wagner and Sir John Boardman. “The acquisition of these gems brings into the Getty’s collection some of the greatest and most famous of all classical gems, most notably the portraits of Antinous and Demosthenes,” explains Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum. “But the group also includes many lesser-known works of exceptional skill and beauty that together raise the status of our collection to a new level. Two

The J. Paul Getty Trust 1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 403 Tel: 310 440 7360 www.getty.edu Communications Department Los Angeles, CA 90049-1681 Fax: 310 440 7722 such are the image of three swans on a Age seal from , which has an elegance and charm transcending its early date (c. 1600 B.C.); and the image of the semi-divine Perseus, a marvel of minute naturalism that cannot fail to enthrall. This acquisition represents the most important enhancement to the Getty Villa’s collection in over a .” Highlights from the acquisition include two of the greatest known ancient gems: a Roman intaglio portrait of Antinous, superbly engraved in black chalcedony circa 130-138 A.D., and a Roman amethyst ringstone with a portrait of Demosthenes, signed by the artist Dioskourides, circa late 1st century B.C. The gem portraying Antinous, the young lover of the Emperor Hadrian (ruled 117-138 A.D.), was engraved on an unusually large black chalcedony stone. Depicted in the guise of a hunter, Antinous wears a cloak over his shoulders pinned in place by a circular fibula and carries a spear. His idealized facial profile features a rounded chin, full lips and thick hair arranged in luscious curls that cover his ears and fall along his neck. The extraordinary quality of the engraving has led many to proclaim this the finest surviving portrait of Antinous in existence in any medium and one of the finest classical gems to have survived since antiquity. Known as the Marlborough Antinous, it passed through many distinguished collections since its rediscovery, probably in the early eighteenth century. So great was the mania inspired by this gem that its first documented modern owner, the Venetian collector Anton Maria Zanetti (1679-1767), supposedly said that he would have sold his house to buy it. From him the gem was purchased by George Spencer (1739-1817), the 4th Duke of Marlborough, who wrote that it was “of an incredible beauty,” making it the highlight of perhaps the most extraordinary collection of antique gems ever assembled. It was sold at auction with the entire Marlborough Collection of gems to David Bromilow in 1875 and then separately in 1899 to Charles Newton Robinson, whose collection was in turn dispersed at auction ten later. It was acquired at auction in 1952 in London by Sangiorgi who considered it an “excellent work of courtly art comparable with the most celebrated portraits of Antinous….” The extraordinary frontal portrait of Demosthenes, the B.C. Greek orator, is the other great masterpiece of the Sangiorgi collection. It is signed by the gem engraver Dioskourides, who is mentioned by ancient writers as the court gem engraver to the emperor Augustus (ruled 27 BC-AD 14) and is today regarded as one of the greatest gem engravers of Roman times. The intaglio image is cut so deeply that the impression stands out in unusually high relief, reading more like a statue in the round. Demosthenes wears a mantle over one shoulder and turns his head slightly to one side. The orator is bearded, with a full mustache framing his lips. His brows are knitted and his forehead creased, giving him a seriousness of expression appropriate to the subject of his famous Philippics. When it was in the collection of the Roman collector Lelio Pasqualini (1549-1611), the gem piqued the interest of every

2 antiquarian, Grand Tour traveler, and glyptic scholar of the day, and its renown has only increased over time.

The Getty Museum acquired the following group of seventeen gems: • A Minoan Blue Chalcedony Tabloid Seal with Three Swans Late Palace Period, circa B.C.

• A Greek Carnelian Scarab with a Nude Archer Archaic Period, circa early B.C.

• A Greek Banded Agate Scaraboid with a Warrior Late Archaic Period, circa 475 B.C.

• A Greek Mottled Yellow Jasper Scaraboid with a Grasshopper Attributed to Dexamenos or a close follower Classical Period, circa late 5th century B.C.

• A Greek Gold Finger Ring with Herakles Classical Period, circa late 5th-early 4th century B.C.

• A Greek Mottled Red Jasper Scaraboid with Perseus Classical Period, circa 4th century B.C.

• A Greek Gold and Carnelian Scarab Swivel Ring with Crouching Aphrodite Classical Period, circa 4th century B.C.

• A Greek Carnelian Scaraboid with Protesilaos on the prow of a warship Classical Period, circa 4th century B.C.

• A Greco-Persian Banded Agate Scaraboid with a Greek-Persian Combat Scene circa mid 5th century B.C.

• An Etruscan Carnelian Scarab with the Rape of Cassandra circa mid 5th century B.C.

• An Etruscan Gold and Carnelian Scarab Finger Ring with Aplu/Apollo circa 4th century B.C.

• An Etruscan Gold and Banded Agate Scarab Finger Ring with Hercle/Herakles circa early 4th century B.C.

• A Roman Carnelian Ringstone with a Portrait of Octavian circa mid-1st century B.C.

• A Roman Carnelian Ringstone with the Aeneas and Anchises Escaping from Troy circa late 1st century B.C.

• A Roman Amethyst Ringstone with a Portrait of Demosthenes signed by Dioskourides, circa late 1st century B.C.

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• A Roman Sardonyx Cameo of Isis circa 1st century B.C.-1st century A.D.

• A Roman Black Chalcedony Intaglio Portrait of Antinous circa 130-138 A.D.

All seventeen gems will be featured as part of a special exhibition opening at the Getty Center in December highlighting recent acquisitions. Following that, they will go on view at the Getty Villa.

### The J. Paul Getty Museum collects Greek and Roman antiquities, European paintings, drawings, manuscripts, sculpture and decorative arts to 1900, as well as photographs from around the world to the present day. The Museum's mission is to display and interpret its collections, and present important loan exhibitions and publications for the enjoyment and education of visitors locally and internationally. This is supported by an active program of research, conservation, and public programs that seek to deepen our knowledge of and connection to works of art.

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