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Monday, 14 July 2014 09:39

The Met Acquires Rare Roman Urn

Porphyry vessel with bearded masks. Roman, Early Imperial, 1st‒early 2nd century A.D. Porphyry vessel with bearded masks. Roman, Early Imperial, 1st‒early 2nd century A.D. © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

An important, elaborately carved Roman urn of the first-early second century A.D.—one of the finest porphyry vessels to have survived from classical antiquity—has been acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

The acquisition was made possible in part thanks to a challenge grant from Metropolitan Museum Trustee Mary Jaharis.

Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Museum, stated: “This rare and beautiful vase is a superb example of classical craftsmanship at its best. The public will now have the extraordinary opportunity to see it within the context of other Hellenistic and Roman works in various media, and especially other sculptures made of porphyry, in the collection of the Museum’s Department of Greek and Roman Art, one of the major repositories of classical art in North America.”

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