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Chalcedony scaraboid

Attributed to Epimenes
ca. 500 BCE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 157
Archer testing arrow

Epimenes signed his name on a gem now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He was probably trained on one of the Aegean islands.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Chalcedony scaraboid
  • Artist: Attributed to Epimenes
  • Period: Archaic
  • Date: ca. 500 BCE
  • Culture: Greek
  • Medium: Chalcedony
  • Dimensions: 5/8 × 1/2 × 11/16 in. (1.5 × 1.3 × 1.7 cm)
  • Classification: Gems
  • Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1931
  • Object Number: 31.11.5
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

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Cover Image for 1030. Chalcedony scaraboid

1030. Chalcedony scaraboid

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The ancient Greeks impressed carved gems, like the left-hand object in this pair, in clay or wax. The gems were personal seals, and the impressions they made identified people, as our signatures do today. On the right, you see a modern impression of the gem with the design reversed.

The material is chalcedony, a quartz hardstone suited to the rendering of fine details but difficult to carve with such precision. The artist who made this gem described a minute figure in remarkable detail with only the simplest tools. The gem displays in miniature the same fine workmanship that distinguishes the best Greek art on any scale.

The same imagery and principles of design that inform Greek art in other media also apply to Greek gems. The sinewy male nude here has many counterparts in vase-painting; compare it to the figures you see depicted elsewhere in this gallery. Like them, this youth testing his arrow is endowed with both a powerful body and a sense of purpose. His pose helps him perform his activity with ease and also turns his body into a compact shape, a perfect match for the oval field he occupies.

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