Powder Flask

Cleveland Museum of Art

Powder Flask

Date
c. 1590
Medium
gilt brass over fabric covered wood
Culture
Italy, 16th century
Department
Medieval Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

Luxury powder flasks served as highly visible badges of ranks. Many highly decorated flasks, like this example, embody all the allure and characteristics of a work of art. This flask depicts an ancient Greek story in which the youthful Paris must reward the most beautiful woman in the world with a golden apple. This powder flask depicts a mythological scene that precipitated the Trojan War. Here we see the Trojan prince Paris giving a golden apple to Aphrodite, the goddess who reciprocates by offering him the most beautiful woman in the world, Helen of Sparta.

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