
Getty Museum
Engraved Scarab with Youth Leaning on a Staff
Creator
EpimenesGreek Artist
All works by this person →While the signature "Epimenes made (it)" survives today on only one engraved gem, four other gems can be attributed to him on stylistic grounds. Epimenes worked in the period around 500 B.C. in the Cyclades, carving both scarabs and scaraboids. His work is distinctive: his gems are decorated with nude youths with the musculature clearly defined and naturalistically rendered. Epimenes was also note
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 500 B.C.
- Medium
- Cornelian
- Culture
- Greek
- Department
- Jewelry
- Institution
- Getty Museum
A nude youth leans over to adjust the heel strap of his sandal, raising his right foot and supporting himself on a staff held in his left hand. His upper body is shown in three-quarter view, and his hair is striated, with a band of curls circling the brow and neckline. The precise identification of this figure is unclear: the youth may represent some mythological figure for whom sandals are meaningful, such as Theseus or Jason, or he may be a generic youth performing in an everyday action. The pose of this figure, standing but leaning over while engaged in some activity, was a favorite for carved gems in the late 500s B.C., in part because it fills the oval space well. However, this carver's skill in depicting a three-quarter view of the youth and in rendering the musculature in detail set this gem apart. Another four gems have been attributed to the same engraver, Epimenes (including [85.AN.370.6](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/11096/attributed-to-epimenes-engraved-scaraboid-inset-into-a-ring-greek-about-500-bc/)), all of which show nude youths engaged in similar activities with the same careful depiction of the body. Only one of these gems is signed: the letter forms of the signature suggest that the artist was from one of the Cycladic Islands, where there was a long tradition of gem engraving. Greek gem carving changed dramatically in form, materials, and technique in the-mid 500s B.C. One of these changes was the introduction of the scarab, with its back carved like a beetle and its flat surface an intaglio. They were usually pierced and worn either as a pendant or attached to a metal hoop and worn as a ring, with the beetle side facing out and the intaglio surface resting against the finger. When serving as a seal, the ring was removed, the scarab swiveled, and the intaglio design was pressed into soft clay or wax to identify and secure property. The scarab form originally derived from Egypt, where it had been used for seals and amulets for centuries. Certain features of Greek scarabs, however, such as the form of the beetle and the hatching around the intaglio motif, show the influence of Phoenician models, which the Greeks probably saw on Cyprus.
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