These eye-catching earrings pay tribute to a pair of remarkable gold, stone, and glass earrings (3rd–2nd century B.C.) from Hellenistic Greece in the Museum’s holdings. Egyptian influences became fashionable in Greek jewelry during Egypt’s Ptolemaic reign (323–31 B.C.), as exemplified in some of the detailing on these spectacular adornments in The Met collection. Among their many components is an Egyptianized atef crown—a tall headdress typically worn by the god Osiris—made of a sun disk in a translucent stone surmounted by twin feathers of opaque black-and-white glass; and a heart-shaped pendant with a red stone, bordered by a black-and-white sawtooth design.
Details
- 14K gold plate
- Glass and Enamel
- Enamel
- Semi-precious stones: blue aventurine, rose quartz,green turquoise
- Pierced, with brass ear wires
- 2 1/4”L x 3/4”W
- Clean with a damp cloth and dry with a soft, clean cloth