Sunday, June 27th, 2010

A Collectors Menagerie Animal Sculpture from the Ancient World

February 15, 2010 by All Art News  
Filed under Sculpture

LONDON.- Ever since I first drew on the walls of his cave, man has had the desire to depict the creatures around him. The Sladmore Gallery, 57 Jermyn Street, St James’s, London, animal is renowned for exhibiting sculpture from the last 200 years, and has now invited Rupert Wace Ancient Art to introduce collectors to a veritable menagerie from the ancient world, spanning a period of some 2.400 years. A Collector’s Menagerie: Animal Sculpture from the Ancient Worldwill be on view from Wednesday 12 to Friday 28 May 2010. Around 70 important and appealing pieces will be offered for prices ranging from £ 1,000 to over £ 150,000.

Rare Egyptian bronze statuette of a crocodile. Ptolemaic Period. 332 30 BC. Length 13 cm 580x199 A Collectors Menagerie Animal Sculpture from the Ancient World
Rare Egyptian bronze statuette of a crocodile. Ptolemaic Period. 332-30 BC. Length: 13 cm

The earliest piece in the exhibition — a stone head of a goat — dates from the 3rd Millennium BC and comes from a larger figure from Bactria, the ancient name of an area between the Hindu Kush and the Oxus river in present-day north Afghanistan. The most recent is a Byzantine bronze finial in the form of a dove dating from around the 5th century AD, possibly representing an early Christian piece Noah’s Dove, a symbol of resurrection.

Visitors to the exhibition will be fascinated by the fine craftsmanship of this amazing collection of creatures great and small, Which still thrill and amuse today.

Rupert Wace has been dealing in antiquities for over 30 years, opening his own business in 1988. He has handled the private sales of antiquities from the British Rail Pension Fund and his clients include major international collectors as well as some of the world’s great museums such as the British Museum and the Ashmolean Museum in the UK, the Musée du Louvre, Paris, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Antikenmuseum, Basel, and the Staatliche Museum in Munich. Rupert Wace is Vice Chairman of the Antiquities Dealers Association in the UK and also of the International Association of Dealers in Ancient Art, both of which rigorously uphold the ethics of dealing in ancient art and Whose members follow a strict code of ethics Concerning the authenticity and provenance of the objects they sell.

Related posts:

  1. Ancient Animal Art Snapped Up within Hours of Exhibition Opening
  2. The Inspirational World of the Ancient Greeks Revealed at World Museum
  3. Rome to Display Ancient Greek Silverware Returned by the Metropolitan
  4. 57 Ancient Tombs with Mummies Unearthed by Archeologists in Egypt
  5. More than 100 Impressive and Intact Ancient Cultic Vessels were Found

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