- Museum number
- X427
- Object
- Cameo: Venus rising from the Waves, North Italian, agate, sixteenth century
- Description
- Cameo 16th.cent, chalcedony. Venus MarinaVenus is on a dolphin,with mermen swimming around her.The type of Venus Anadyomene[Venus rising from the sea] originated in Greek sculpture and is thought to derive from a lost work of Apelles,the famous painter.Apelles died in Cos whilst copying his Aphrodite probably early in the third century BC
- Materials
- Chalcedony
- On display?
- Yes
Further description
- Simple name
- Gem
Cameo: Venus borne on the waves
Italian
Agate, sixteenth century
This remarkable Renaissance cameo probably shows the birth of Venus. In Classical mythology Venus, the goddess of love, was born from sea foam and blown ashore by the winds. The deeply undercut figure of the goddess is almost detached from the background.
Many wealthy aristocrats formed collections of gems but Sir William was unusual for choosing to collect mainly intaglios (in which the design is carved into the gem) rather than cameos (in which the design stands out in relief). Almost half the gems are ancient, the remainder date from the sixteenth to the early nineteenth centuries. Most are now mounted in late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century gold rings.
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