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Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin
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Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin

Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin

This enamel pin featuring Pegasus was inspired by a Greek neck-amphora vessel in the Getty Villa collection. 

- Dimensions: 1 1/2 inches L x 1 inch W
- Material: Enamel, nickel, 2 metal butterfly attachments
- Made in the USA
- Item #: NEC-PIN

An unusual scene decorates the neck amphora that inspired the adaptation for this ornament: on one side a winged horse, perhaps Pegasus, is shown in profile to the left, with its wings spread as if ascending or landing. On the reverse is a nude youth holding a morsel of food for a long-tailed cat leaping up with its forelegs extended to snatch the tempting treat.

Depictions of cheetahs and cats as domestic pets occur relatively frequently in Etruscan art, although scenes of cat-teasing are rare and more typical in Greek art.

Neck-Amphora, about 490 BCE
Close to the Painter of the Dancing Satyrs (Etruscan, active 500-475 BCE)
Terracotta
34.6 x 21.5 cm (13 5/8 x 8 7/16 in.)
J. Paul Getty Museum, 68.AE.17

$10.00
Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin
$10.00

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Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin

This enamel pin featuring Pegasus was inspired by a Greek neck-amphora vessel in the Getty Villa collection. 

- Dimensions: 1 1/2 inches L x 1 inch W
- Material: Enamel, nickel, 2 metal butterfly attachments
- Made in the USA
- Item #: NEC-PIN

An unusual scene decorates the neck amphora that inspired the adaptation for this ornament: on one side a winged horse, perhaps Pegasus, is shown in profile to the left, with its wings spread as if ascending or landing. On the reverse is a nude youth holding a morsel of food for a long-tailed cat leaping up with its forelegs extended to snatch the tempting treat.

Depictions of cheetahs and cats as domestic pets occur relatively frequently in Etruscan art, although scenes of cat-teasing are rare and more typical in Greek art.

Neck-Amphora, about 490 BCE
Close to the Painter of the Dancing Satyrs (Etruscan, active 500-475 BCE)
Terracotta
34.6 x 21.5 cm (13 5/8 x 8 7/16 in.)
J. Paul Getty Museum, 68.AE.17

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Description

This enamel pin featuring Pegasus was inspired by a Greek neck-amphora vessel in the Getty Villa collection. 

- Dimensions: 1 1/2 inches L x 1 inch W
- Material: Enamel, nickel, 2 metal butterfly attachments
- Made in the USA
- Item #: NEC-PIN

An unusual scene decorates the neck amphora that inspired the adaptation for this ornament: on one side a winged horse, perhaps Pegasus, is shown in profile to the left, with its wings spread as if ascending or landing. On the reverse is a nude youth holding a morsel of food for a long-tailed cat leaping up with its forelegs extended to snatch the tempting treat.

Depictions of cheetahs and cats as domestic pets occur relatively frequently in Etruscan art, although scenes of cat-teasing are rare and more typical in Greek art.

Neck-Amphora, about 490 BCE
Close to the Painter of the Dancing Satyrs (Etruscan, active 500-475 BCE)
Terracotta
34.6 x 21.5 cm (13 5/8 x 8 7/16 in.)
J. Paul Getty Museum, 68.AE.17

Neck-Amphora Enamel Pin | Getty Museum Store