FILTER RESULTS × Close
Skip to Content ☰ Open Filter >>

Art of the Ancient Mediterranean

Showing 3 of 41




Open Access

Brooch, V-Shaped

Artist: Unknown Roman Artist Primary
ca. 3rd century CE
Dimensions: 1.97 x 1.38 x 0.55 in. (5 x 3.5 x 1.4 cm)
Object Type: Jewelry
Creation Place: Europe
Medium and Support: Enamel
Credit Line: Lent by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of J. Pierpont Morgan, 1917 (17.192.14)
Accession Number: L2010.01.12
On View: Bellarmine Hall Galleries

The fashionable use of brooches, or fibulae, to show status was brought to the Northern Roman provinces by the Roman elite. This brooch was made in the champlevé enamel technique. Frankish tribes then adopted the wearing of brooches, but used different goldsmith techniques and shapes.




Keywords

Click a term to view other artwork with the same keyword

Gallo-Roman
Refers to the styles and cultures that developed in the area of Gaul, in modern France and south and west of the Rhine river, under the influence of Roman rule and culture. The term is also used to refer narrowly to the style and culture that developed among Gallic people in Gaul, under Roman influence.
enameling
The process of applying a vitreous coating to metal, ceramic, glass, or other surfaces by fusion using heat in a kiln or furnace, with the result of creating a smooth, hard surface.
jewelry
Ornaments such as bracelets, necklaces, and rings, of precious or semiprecious materials worn or carried on the person for adornment; also includes similar articles worn or carried for devotional or mourning purposes.
public domain
Land owned and controlled by the state or federal government. Also, the status of publications, products, and processes that are not protected under patent or copyright.
brooches
Ornamental jewelry made in a variety of forms fastened by a pin. For decorative items, similar in appearance to a brooch, but attached to a garment with a spring fastening, use "clips (jewelry)."
enamel
A semi-transparent or opaque vitreous, porcelain-like coating applied by fusion to metal, glass, or ceramic, having a glossy appearance after hardening. Enamel is typically made from powdered fusible glasses (e.g., quartz, feldspar, clay, soda, and borax) and opaque colorants (e.g., cobalt blue, tin oxide) mixed with oil or water, then painted or sprayed on the object and fired up to 800 C. Enamel is used to protect a surface, to decorate objects in various colors and patterns, to form a surface for encaustic painting, and for other purposes.

Portfolio List

This object is a member of the following portfolios:


Does this record contain inaccurate information or language that you feel we should improve? Please contact the museum registrar at mpaqua@fairfield.edu.