
Cleveland Museum of Art
Mirror with Engraved Scene: Thesan and Memnun (Eos and Memnon)
- Date
- c. 470–460 BCE
- Medium
- bronze
- Culture
- Etruscan
- Department
- Greek and Roman Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Two figures occupy the reverse side of this nearly circular bronze mirror, neatly enclosed by a continuous ivy-leaf border. Equipped with wings and winged shoes, the dawn goddess Thesan (Eos) carries the body of her son Memnun (Memnon). Slain by Achilles on the battlefield at Troy, he still wears armor and greaves, though his crested helmet has fallen below. The subject occurs on several other Etruscan mirrors and Greek vases of the same time period, though not nearly as frequently as scenes of Eos in pursuit of lovers (including Tithonos, father of Memnon). The short tang below the disc of this mirror fit into a larger handle, likely of bone or ivory.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.
Hand Mirror
Art Institute of Chicago

Mirror with Engraved Scene: Man Threatening Child (Telephos and Orestes?)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Mirror-lid Applique of Dionysos, Eros, and a Kitharist
Getty Museum
Mirror with a Handle in the Form of a Female Figure
Art Institute of Chicago

Sleep and Death Cista Handle
Cleveland Museum of Art

Fragmentary Attic Red-Figure Kylix
Getty Museum

Mirror with Engraved Scene: Two Female Figures
Cleveland Museum of Art

Design for a Hand Mirror
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Fragmentary Attic Red-Figure Nestoris
Getty Museum
Mirror
Art Institute of Chicago

Aurora Taking Leave of Tithonus
Getty Museum

Box Mirror with Head of Athena
Cleveland Museum of Art