An
engraved gem is a small
gemstone, usually
semi-precious, that has been carved, in the
Western tradition normally with images or inscriptions only on one
face. The engraving of gemstones was a major luxury art form in the
ancient world, and an important one in some later periods. Strictly
speaking,
engraving means carving in
intaglio, with the design cut
into the flat background of
the stone, but
relief carvings, with the
design projecting
out of the background as in nearly all
cameos, are also covered by the
term. The activity is also called
gem carving, and
the artists
gem-cutters. References to
antique
gems, and
intaglios in a
jewellery context, will almost always mean carved
gems. Vessels like the
Cup of the
Ptolemies and heads or figures carved in the round are also
known as "
hardstone carvings" and
similar terms.
Glyptics, or "glyptic art", covers the
field of small carved stones, including
cylinder seals and inscriptions, especially in
an archaeological context. Though they were keenly collected in
antiquity, most carved gems originally functioned as
seals, often mounted in a ring; intaglio
designs register most clearly when viewed by the recipient of a
letter as an impression in hardened wax. A finely carved seal was
practical, as it made forgery more difficult - the distinctive
personal
signature did not really exist in
antiquity.
Technique
Gems were mostly cut by using abrasive powder from harder stones in
conjunction with a hand-drill, probably often set in a
lathe.
Emery has been
mined for abrasive powder on Naxos
since
antiquity. Some early types of seal were cut by hand, rather
than a drill, which does not allow fine detail. There is no
evidence that magnifying lenses were used by gem cutters in
antiquity. A medieval guide to gem-carving techniques survives from
Theophilus Presbyter. Byzantine
cutters used a flat-edged wheel on a drill for intaglio work, while
Carolingian ones used round-tipped drills; it is unclear where they
learnt this technique from. In intaglio gems at least, the recessed
cut surface is usually very well preserved, and microscopic
examination is revealing of the technique used. The colour of
several gemstones can be enhanced by a number of artificial
methods, using heat, sugar and dyes. Many of these can be shown to
have been used since antiquity - since the 7th millennium BC in the
case of heating.
History
The technique has an ancient tradition in the
Near East, and is represented in all or most early
cultures from the area; from the
Indus Valley civilization
outwards.
The cylinder
seal, whose design only appears when rolled over damp clay,
from which the flat ring type developed, was the usual form in
Mesopotamia, Assyria and other cultures, and spread to the Minoan
world, including parts of Greece and Cyprus
.
These were made in various types of stone, not all hardstone. The
Greek tradition emerged in
Ancient
Greek art under Minoan influence on mainland
Helladic culture, and reached an apogee of subtlety
and refinement in the
Hellenistic
period. Pre-Hellenistic Egyptian seals tend to have
inscriptions in
hieroglyphs
rather than images.
Round or oval Greek gems (along with similar objects in bone and
ivory) are found from the 8th and 7th centuries BC, usually with
animals in energetic geometric poses, often with a border marked by
dots or a rim. Early examples are mostly in softer stones.
Gems of
the 6th century are more often oval, with a scarab back (in the past this type was called a
"scarabaeus"), and human or divine figures as well as animals; the
scarab form was apparently adopted from Phoenicia
. The forms are sophisticated for the period,
despite the usually small size of the gems. In the 5th century gems
became somewhat larger, but still only 2-3
centimetres tall. Despite this, very fine detail
is shown, including the eyelashes on one male head, perhaps a
portrait.
Four gems signed by Dexamenos of Chios
are the
finest of the period, two showing herons.
Relief carving became common in 5th century BC Greece, and
gradually most of the spectacular carved gems in the Western
tradition were in relief, although the
Sassanian and other traditions remained faithful
to the intaglio form. Generally a relief image is more impressive
than an intaglio one; in the earlier form the recipient of a
document saw this in the impressed sealing wax, while in the later
reliefs it was the owner of the seal who kept it for himself,
probably marking the emergence of gems meant to be collected or
worn as
jewellery pendants in necklaces and the like, rather than used
as seals - later ones are sometimes rather large to use to seal
letters. However inscriptions are usually still in reverse
("mirror-writing") so they only read correctly on impressions (or
by viewing from behind with transparent stones). This aspect also
partly explains the collecting of impressions in plaster or wax
from gems, which may be easier to appreciate than the
original.
The cameo, which is rare in intaglio form, seems to have reached
Greece around the 3rd century; the
Farnese
Tazza is the only major surviving Hellenistic example
(depending on the date assigned to the
Gonzaga Cameo - see below), but other
glass-paste imitations with portraits suggest
that gem-type cameos were made in this period. The conquests of
Alexander the Great had opened
up new trade routes to the Greek world and increased the range of
gemstones available. Roman gems generally continued Hellenistic
styles, and can be hard to date, until their quality sharply
declines at the end of the 2nd century AD. Philosophers are
sometimes shown;
Cicero refers to people
having portraits of their favourite on their cups and rings. The
Romans invented
cameo glass, best known
from the
Portland Vase, as a cheaper
material for cameos, and one that allowed consistent and
predictable layers on even round objects.
During the European
Middle Ages antique
engraved gems were one classical art form which was always highly
valued, and a large but unknown number of ancient gems have (unlike
most surviving classical works of art) never been buried and then
excavated. Gems were used to decorate elaborate pieces of goldsmith
work such as votive crowns, book-covers and crosses, sometimes very
inappropriately given their subject matter.
Matthew Paris illustrated a number of gems
owned by St Albans
Abbey
, including one large Late Roman imperial cameo (now
lost) called Kaadmau which was used to induce overdue
childbirths - it was slowly lowered, with a prayer to St Alban, on
its chain down the woman's cleavage, as it was believed that the
infant would flee downwards to escape it, a belief in accordance
with the views of the "father of mineralogy", Georgius Agricola (1494-1555) on jasper. Some gems were engraved, mostly with
religious scenes in intaglio, during the period both in
Byzantium and Europe.
In the West production revived from the
Carolingian period, when
rock crystal was the commonest material.
The
Susanna Crystal (or Lothar
Crystal, British
Museum
, 11.5 cm diameter), clearly not designed for
use as a seal, is the best known of 20 surviving Carolingian large
intaglio gems with complex figural scenes, although most were used
for seals. Several crystals were designed, like the
Susanna Crystal, to be viewed through the gem from the
unengraved side, so their inscriptions were reversed like the
seals. In wills and inventories, engraved gems were often given
pride of place at the head of a list of treasures.
Some gems
in a remarkably effective evocation of classical style were made in
Southern Italy for the court of Frederick II, Holy Roman
Emperor in the first half of the 13th century, several in the
Cabinet des
Médailles
in Paris. Meanwhile the church led the
development of large, often double-sided, metal seal matrices for
seals that were left permanently attached to
charters and similar legal documents, dangling by a
cord, though ring seals that were broken when a letter was opened
remained in use. It is not clear to what extent this also continued
practices in the ancient world.
Renaissance revival

Warrior supporting dying
comrade.
The late medieval French and Burgundian courts collected and
commissioned gems, and began to use them for portraits. The British
Museum has what is probably a seated portrait of
John, Duke of Berry in intaglio on a
sapphire, and the Hermitage has a cameo
head of
Charles VII of
France.
Interest
had also revived in Early
Renaissance Italy, where Venice
soon became
a particular centre of production. Along with the Roman
statues and
sarcophagi being newly
excavated, antique gems were prime sources for artists eager to
regain a classical figurative vocabulary. Cast bronze copies of
gems were made, which circulated around Italy, and later Europe.
Among very many examples of borrowings that can be traced
confidently, the
Felix or
Diomedes gem owned by
Lorenzo il Magnifico (see
below), with an unusual pose, was copied by
Leonardo da Vinci and may well have
provided the "starting point" for one of
Michelangelo's
ignudi on the
Sistine Chapel ceiling. Another of
Lorenzo's gems supplied, probably via a drawing by
Perugino, a pose used by
Raphael.
By the 16th century carved and engraved gems were keenly collected
across Europe for dedicated sections of a
cabinet of curiosities, and their
production revived, in classical styles; 16th-century gem-cutters
working with the same types of
sardonyx and
other hardstones and using virtually the same techniques, produced
classicizing works of glyptic art, often intended as forgeries, in
such quantity that they compromised the market for them, as
Gisela Richter observed in 1922. Even
today, Sir
John Boardman admits that
"We are sometimes at a loss to know whether what we are looking at
belongs to the 1st or the 15th century AD, a sad confession for any
art-historian." Other Renaissance gems reveal their date by showing
mythological scenes derived from literature that were not part of
the visual reportoire in classical times, or borrowing compositions
from Renaissance paintings, and using "compositions with rather
more figures than any ancient engraver would have tolerated or
attempted". Among artists, the wealthy
Rubens
was a notable collector.
Parallel traditions
Engraved gems occur in the
Bible, especially
when the
hoshen and
ephod worn by the
High
Priest are described; though these were inscribed with the
names of the
tribes of Israel in
letters, rather than any images. A few identifiably Jewish gems
survive from the classical world, including Persia, mostly with the
owner's name in Hebrew, but some with symbols such as the
menorah. Many gems are inscribed in the
Islamic world, typically with verses from the
Koran, and sometimes gems in the Western tradition
just contain inscriptions.
Many Asian and Middle Eastern cultures have their own traditions,
although for example the important Chinese tradition of carved
gemstones and hardstones, especially
jade
carving, is broader than the European one of concentration on a
flattish faced stone that might fit into a ring.
Seal engraving covers the inscription
that is printed by stamping, which nearly always only contains
script rather than images.
Other
decoration of the seal itself was not intended to be
reproduced.
Iconography
The iconography of gems is similar to that of coins, though more
varied. Early gems mostly show animals. Gods,
satyrs, and mythological scenes were common, and
famous statues often represented - much modern knowledge of the
poses of lost Greek cult statues such as
Athena Promachos comes from the study of
gems, which often have clearer images than coins. A 6th(?) century
BC Greek gem already shows
Ajax committing
suicide, with his name inscribed. The story of
Heracles was, as in other arts, the most common
source of narrative subjects. A scene may be intended as the
subject of an
early Archaic gem, and
certainly appears on 6th century examples from the later Archaic
period.
Portraits of monarchs are found from the Hellenistic period
onwards, although as they do not usually have identifying
inscriptions, many fine ones cannot be identified with a subject.
In the Roman Imperial period, portraits of the imperial family were
often produced for the court circle, and many of these have
survived, especially a number of spectacular cameos from the time
of
Augustus. As private objects, produced
no doubt by artists trained in the tradition of Hellenistic
monarchies, their iconography is less inhibited than the public
state art of the period about showing divine attributes as well as
sexual matters. The identity and interpretation of figures in the
Gemma Augustea remains unclear.
A number
of gems from the same period contain scenes apparently from the
lost epic on the Sack of Troy, of which
the finest is by Dioskurides (Chatsworth House
).
Renaissance and later gems remain dominated by the Hellenistic
reportoire of subjects, though portraits in contemporary styles
were also produced.
Collectors
Famous collectors begin with King
Mithridates VI of Pontus (d. 63
BC), whose collection was part of the booty of
Pompey the Great, who donated it to the
Temple of
Jupiter in Rome.
Julius Caesar was determined to excel Pompey
in this as in other areas, and later gave six collections to his
own
Temple of Venus
Genetrix; according to
Suetonius gems
were among his varied collecting passions. Many later emperors also
collected gems. Chapters 4-6 of Book 37 of the
Natural History of
Pliny the Elder give a summary art history
of the Greek and Roman tradition, and of Roman collecting.
According to Pliny
Marcus Aemilius
Scaurus was the first Roman collector.
As in later periods objects carved in the round from semi-precious
stone were regarded as a similar category of object; these are also
known as
hardstone carvings.
One of
the largest, the Coupe
des Ptolémées was probably donated to the Basilica of
Saint-Denis
, near Paris, by Charles
the Bald, as the inscription on its former gem-studded gold
Carolingian mounting stated; it may have belonged to Charlemagne. One of the best
collections of such vessels, though mostly plain without carved
decoration, was looted from Constantinople
in the Fourth
Crusade, and is in the Treasury of the Basilica of
San Marco
in Venice
. Many
of these retain the medieval mounts which adapted them for
liturgical use. Like the
Coupe des Ptolémées, most objects
in European museums lost these when they became objects of
classicist interest from the Renaissance onwards.
The collection of 827 engraved gems of
Pope
Paul II, which included the "Felix gem" of
Diomedes with the Palladium, was acquired by
Lorenzo il Magnifico; the
Medici collection included many other gems
and was legendary, valued in inventories much higher than his
Botticellis. Somewhat like Chinese
collectors, Lorenzo had all his gems inscribed with his name.
The
Gonzaga Cameo passed through a series
of famous collections before coming to rest in the Hermitage
. First known in the collection of Isabella d'Este, it passed to the Gonzaga Dukes of Mantua
, Emperor
Rudolf II, Queen Christina of
Sweden, Cardinal Decio Azzolini,
Livio Odescalchi, Duke of Bracciano
, and Pope Pius VI before
Napoleon carried it off to Paris, where his
Empress Joséphine gave it to
Alexander I of Russia after
Napoleon's downfall, as a token of goodwill. It remains disputed
whether the cameo is Alexandrian
work of the 3rd century BC, or a Julio-Claudian imitation of the style
from the 1st century AD.
Three of the largest cameo gems from antiquity were created for
members of the Julio-Claudian dynasty and seem to have survived
above ground since antiquity.
The large Gemma
Augustea appeared in in 1246 in the treasury of the Basilique
St-Sernin, Toulouse
. In 1533,
King François I appropriated it and
moved it to Paris, where it soon disappeared around 1590.
Not long
thereafter it was fenced for 12,000 gold pieces to Emperor Rudolph
II; it remains in Vienna
, alongside
the Gemma Claudia. The largest
flat engraved gem known from antiquity is the
Great Cameo of France, which entered
the French royal collection only in 1791.
In England, a false dawn of gem collecting was represented
Henry, Prince of Wales'purchase of
the cabinet of the Flemish antiquary
Abraham Gorlaeus in 1609, and engraved gems
featured among the antiquities assembled by
Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of
Arundel.
Later in the century William Cavendish, 2nd
Duke of Devonshire, formed a collection of gems that is still
conserved at Chatsworth
. In the eighteenth century a more discerning
cabinet of gems was assembled by Henry Howard, 4th Earl of
Carlisle, acting upon the advice of Francesco Maria Zanetti and
Francesco Ficoroni; 170 of the
Carlisle gems, both Classical and post-Classical, were purchased in
1890 for the British
Museum
.
By the mid-eighteenth century prices had reached such a level that
major collections could only be formed by the very wealthy; lesser
collectors had to make do with collecting
plaster casts, which was also very popular, or
buying one of many sumptuously illustrated catalogues of
collections that were published.
Catherine
the Great's collection is in the Hermitage Museum
; one large collection she had bought was the gems
from the Orléans
Collection. Louis XV of
France hired
Dominique Vivant
to assemble a collection for
Madame
de Pompadour.
In the eighteenth century British aristocrats were able to
outcompete even the agents for royal and princely collectors on the
Continent, aided by connoisseur-dealers like Count
Antonio Maria Zanetti and
Philipp von Stosch. Zanetti travelled
Europe in pursuit of gems hidden in private collections for the
British aristocrats he tutored in connoisseurship; his own
collection was described in
A.F. Gori,
Le gemme antiche di Anton
Maria Zanetti (Venice, 1750), illustrated with eighty plates
of engravings from his own drawings. Baron
Philipp von Stosch (1691 - 1757), a
Prussian who lived in Rome and then Florence, was a major
collector, as well as a dealer in engraved gems: "busy,
unscrupulous, and in his spare time a spy for England in Italy".
Among his contemporaries, Stosch made his lasting impression with a
great volume on the subject of
Gemmæ Antiquæ Cælatæ
(
Pierres antiques graveés) (1724), in which
Bernard Picart's engravings reproduced
seventy antique carved hardstones like onyx, jasper and carnelian
from European collections, a volume of inestimable value to
antiquarians and historians. It immediately joined the repertory of
books of engravings after antiquities of all kinds. Stosch also
encouraged the young German artist Johann Lorenz Natter
(1705-1763), a German gem-engraver and medalist, whom Stosch set to
copying ancient carved gems in Florence.
Frederick the Great of Prussia bought Stosch's collection in 1765 and built
the Antique
Temple
in the park of the Sanssouci Palace
to house his collections of ancient sculpture,
coins and over 4,000 gems - the two were naturally often grouped
together. The gems are now in the Antikensammlung Berlin
.
The
collection of "Consul" Joseph Smith , British
consul in Venice
was bought
by George III of England and
remains in the Royal
Collection. The collections of Charles Towneley, Richard Payne Knight and Clayton Mordaunt Cracherode were
bought by or bequeathed to the British Museum
, founding their very important collection.
But the most famous English collection was that formed by the
4th Duke of
Marlborough (1739 - 1817), "which the Duke kept in his bedroom
and resorted to as a relief from his ambitious wife, his busy
sister and his many children".
This included collections formerly owned by
the Gonzaga of Mantua
(later owned
by Lord Arundel), the 2nd Earl of
Bessborough, and the brother of Lord Chesterfield, who himself warned his
son in one of his Letters against "days lost in poring
upon imperceptible intaglios and cameos". The collection,
including its single most famous cameo, the "Marlborough gem" depicting an initiation of
Cupid and Psyche, was dispersed after a sale in 1899, fortunately
timed for the new American museums and provided the core of the
collection of the Metropolitan
in New York and elsewhere, with the largest group
still together being about 100 in the Walters Art
Gallery
, Baltimore.
Prince
Stanisław
Poniatowski (1754-1833) "commissioned about 2500 gems and
encouraged the belief that they were, in fact, ancient."
He
presented a set of 419 plaster impressions of his collection to the
King of Prussia which now form the
Daktyliothek Poniatowski in Berlin
, where they
were recognised as modern in 1832, mainly because the signatures of
ancient artists from very different times were found on gems in too
consistent a style.
Artists
As in other fields, not many ancient artists' names are known from
literary sources, although some gems are signed. According to
Pliny,
Pyrgoteles was the only artist
allowed to carve gems for the seal rings of
Alexander the Great. Most of the most
famous Roman artists were Greeks, like
Dioskurides, who is thought to have produced the
Gemma Augustea, and is recorded as the artist of the matching
signet rings of
Augustus - very carefully controlled, they allowed
orders to be issued in his name by his most trusted associates.
Other works survive signed by him (rather more than are all likely
to be genuine), and his son Hyllos was also a gem engraver.
The
Anichini family were leading
artists in Venice and elsewhere in the 15th and 16th centuries.
Many Renaissance artists no doubt kept their activities quiet, as
they were passing their products off as antique. Other specialist
carvers included
Giovanni Bernardi
(1494-1553),
Giovanni Jacopo
Caraglio(c. 1500 – 1565),
Giuseppe Antonio Torricelli
(1662-1719), the German-Italian
Anton
Pichler (1697 - 1779) and his sons
Giovanni and
Luigi,
Charles Christian Reisen
(Anglo-Norweigan, 1680 - 1725). Other sculptors also carved gems,
or had someone in their workshop who did.
Leone Leoni said he personally spent two months
on a double-sided cameo gem with portraits of
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V
and his wife and son.
The Scot
James Tassie (1735 - 1799),
and his nephew
William (1777 – 1860)
developed methods for taking hard impressions from old gems, and
also for casting new designs from carved wax in
enamel, enabling a huge production of what
are really imitation engraved gems. The fullest catalogue of his
impressions ("Tassie gems") was published in 1791, with 15,800
items.
There are complete sets of the impressions
in the Hermitage, the Victoria & Albert Museum
in London, and in Edinburgh. Other types of
imitation became fashionable for ladies'
brooches, such as
ceramic
cameos by
Josiah Wedgwood in
jasperware. The engraved gem fell
permanently out of fashion from about the 1860s, perhaps partly as
a growing realization of the number of gems that were not what they
seemed to be scared collectors. Among the last practitioners was
James Robertson, who
sensibly moved into the new art of
photography.
Imitations
Cameo glass was invented by the Romans
in about 30BC to imitate engraved hardstone cameos, with the
advantage that consistent layering could be achieved even on round
vessels - impossible with natural gemstones. It was however very
difficult to manufacture and surviving pieces, mostly famously the
Portland Vase, are actually much rarer
than Roman gemstone cameos. The technique was revived in the 18th
and especially 19th centuries in England and elsewhere, and was
most effectively used in French
Art
Nouveau glass that made no attempt to follow classical
styles.
Another offshoot of the mania for engraved gems is the fine-grained
slightly translucent
stoneware called
jasperware that was developed by
Josiah Wedgwood and perfected in 1775.
Though white-on-blue matte jasperware is the most familiar Wedgwood
ceramic line, still in production today and widely imitated since
the mid-19th century, white-on-black was also produced. Wedgwood
made notable jasperware copies of the Portland Vase and the
Marlborough gem, a famous head of
Antinous, and interpreted in jasperware casts from
antique gems by James Tassie.
John
Flaxman's
neoclassical designs for
jasperware were carried out in the extremely low relief typical of
cameo production.
Some other porcelain imitated three-layer cameos purely by
paint, even in implausible objects like a flat Sèvres
tea-tray of 1840.
Scholars
Gems were a favourite topic for
antiquaries from the Renaissance onwards,
culminating in the work of Philipp von Stosch, described above.
Major progress in understanding Greek gems was made in the work of
Adolf Furtwängler (1853 -
1907, father of
the conductor,
Wilhelm). Among recent scholars Sir
John Boardman (b. 1927) has
made a special contribution, again concentrating on Greek
gems.
Notes
- Fully half of the antique engraved gems in the Berlin museums and the
British
Museum are either sard or
carnelian, Etta M.
Saunders, noted (Saunders, "Goddess Riding a Goat-Bull Monster: A
Ceres Zodiac Gem from the Walters Art Gallery" The Journal of
the Walters Art Gallery 49/50
(1991/1992;7-11) note 19. .
- The three preeminent European collections of post-Classical
engraved gems are the Cabinet des Médailles at the
Bibliothèque National, Paris, the
Hapsburg collection, Vienna, and the British Museum, London, O. M. Dalton
observed in "Mediæval and Later Engraved Gems in the British Museum
— I" The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs
23 No. 123 (June 1913:128-136) and "II" The
Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 24 No.
127 (October 1913:28-32).
- Kornbluth, 8-16 quotes passages from Theophilius and others,
and discusses various techniques. See Theophilius's article for
full on-line texts.
- Thoresen, "Gemstone enhancement"
- Boardman, 39 See Beazley for more detail.
- "Lenticular" or "lentoid" gems have the form of a lense.
- Beazley, Later Archaic Greek gems: introduction.
- Boardman, 68-69
- Boardman, 129-130
- Boardman, 187-188
- Beazley, "Hellenistic gems: introduction"
- Boardman, 275-6
- Henderson, 112-113
- De Natura fossilium Bk 1
- Examples: 14th century French Crucifixion, Rosary pendant, 15th century, both onyx and in the MMA
New York.
- Kornbluth, 1, 4. Susanna Crystal, British Museum.
- Kornbluth, 1, 4-6
- Campbell, 411
- Draper, James David. "Cameo Appearances". In Heilbrunn Timeline
of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–.
(August 2008)
- Claire Clark, Kenneth in J. Farago (ed)Leonardo's
projects, c. 1500-1519. Volume 3 of Leonardo da Vinci, selected
scholarship, Publisher Taylor & Francis, 1999, ISBN
0815329350, 9780815329350. p. 28/160 Google books. Image and description by Boardman
- Henk Th. van Veen. The translation of Raphael's Roman
style. Volume 22 of Groningen studies in cultural change, GSCC
; 22, p. 26, Peeters Publishers, 2007. ISBN 9042918551,
9789042918559. Google books
- "Nowadays, however, they have been somewhat neglected—probably
because a genuine gem is difficult to distinguish from forged one,
and collectors have grown timid in consequence" (Richter, "Engraved
Gems" The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin,
17.9 (September 1922:193-196) p. 193
- Beazley, Boardman lecture
- Getty, Collectors
- Beazley Archive, "Late Antique, Early Christian and Jewish
gems: Sasanian gems - Christian and Jewish"
- Numismatic
evidence is the other most indicative evidence of the general pose
of locally important cult images.
- Beazley, Geometric and Early Archaic gems: Island gems
6th down.
- Beazley, Archaic period pages
- Hennig, 154-5. British Museum on the "Blacas Cameo" of
Augustus.
- Hennig, 153, Boardman, 275-6
- Pliny, see below. Whether he was right to claim Mithridates as
the first collector is dubious.
- De Vita Caesarum, Divus Iulius, (The Lives of the
Caesars, The Deified Julius), Fordham online text
- Pliny, Natural History, xxxvii.5
- Treasury of San Marco
- Getty Collectors, under Pietro Barbó
- It passed into the Arundel collection and came to Oxford: see
Ashmolean image and description and Graham
Pollard, "The Felix Gem at Oxford and its provenance" The
Burlington Magazine 119 No. 893 (August
1977:574).
- Online: The Introduction from Lorenzo
de'Medici, Collector of Antiquities', by Laurie Fusco & Gino
Corti, Cambridge UP 2006, which gives a survey of early Renaissance
collecting in general. On his signing his gems see
Draper
- Gonzaga Cameo Exhibition in Mantua] further details
- Mantua exhibition
- Roy Strong, Henry Prince of Wales and England's Lost
Renaissance (1986:199).
- Diana Scarisbrick, "The Devonshire Parure",
Archaeologia 108 (1986:241).
- "Sulphurs" provided even finer detail; James Tassie made a career
of casting gems in plaster and in coloured opaque glass.
- Apart from those mentioned below, there is information on other
notable collections from the Getty Museum
- Hermitage Museum
- His correspondence with Henry Howard, 4th Earl of
Carlisle is published by Diana Scarisbrick, "Gem
Connoisseurship - The 4th Earl of Carlisle's Correspondence with
Francesco de Ficoroni and Antonion Maria Zanetti", The
Burlington Magazine 129No. 1007 (February
1987:90-104).
- Beazley, Boardman Lecture
- Towneley's were bought from his heirs, the others bequeathed.
See King, 218-225 for a selection of highlights
- Beazley, Marlborough Collection
- Beazley, The Marlborough Gems, Boardman Lecture.
- Beazley, The Poniatowski Collection of gems. More details in
The Bernie Madoff of Gem
Collectors
- Boardman, 275-6. Hennig 153-4
- Metropolitan
- An earlier version is on Google books A Catalogue, Of Impressions In
Sulphur: Of Antique And Modern Gems From Which Pastes Are Made And
Sold (1775) (ISBN 110459093X / 1-104-59093-X)
- Beazley, Tassie
- Robin Reilly, Wedgwood Jasper London, 1972.
- Antinous See "Gems" section for gem and casts etc
- Sèvres tea-tray from the Metropolitan
References
- "Beazley" The Classical Art Research Centre, Oxford University.
Beazley
Archive - Extensive website on classical gems; page titles used
as references
- Boardman, John
ed., The Oxford History of Classical Art, 1993, OUP, ISBN
0198143869
- Campbell, Gordon (ed). The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative
Arts, Oxford University Press US, 2006, ISBN 0195189485,
9780195189483 Google books
- Furtwängler, Adolf. Die antiken Gemmen, 1900. This
photo repertory was the cornerstone of modern studies.
- Henderson, George. Early Medieval Art, 1972, rev.
1977, Penguin.
- Henig, Martin (ed), A Handbook of Roman Art, Phaidon,
1983, ISBN 0714822140
- King, C. W.; Handbook of Engraved Gems, 1866,
reprinted Kessinger Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0766151646,
9780766151642 Google books
- Kornbluth, Genevra Alisoun. Engraved gems of the
Carolingian empire, Penn State Press, 1995, ISBN 0271014261.
Google books
- Thoresen, Lisbet. "On Gemstones: Gemological and Analytical
Studies of Ancient Intaglios and Cameos." In Ancient Glyptic Art-
Gem Engraving and Gem Carving. http://ancient-gems.lthoresen.com
(February 2009)
- Gems and gem engraving by Pliny the Younger
External links
Further reading
- Boardman, John. Island Gems, 1963.
- Boardman, John. Archaic Greek Gems, 1968.
- Brown, Clifford M. (ed). Engraved Gems : Survivals and
Revivals, National Gallery of Art Washington, 1997. ISBN
0894682717, 9780894682711