
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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