One of a pair of earrings
Castellani
(Italian, 1814–1930)
Giacinto Melillo
(Italian, 1845–1915)
about 1870–80
(not assigned)Italy
Medium/TechniqueGold
DimensionsHeight x width x depth: 2.7 x 2.7 x 1.1 cm (1 1/16 x 1 1/16 x 7/16 in.)
Credit LineGift of Edward Jackson Holmes
Accession number41.917.2
On View
Not on viewClassificationsJewelry / Adornment
DescriptionThese finely crafted repoussé ornaments in the archaeological revival style feature amorini (cupids) subduing Venus’s doves with silken cords. Their maker, probably the master goldsmith Giacinto Melillo, most likely drew inspiration for the subject from the collection of antiquities owned by the Campana family of Rome. Giovanni Pietro Campana was an archaeologist who added many excavated works from his expeditions in Etruria to his father and grandfather’s collection of ancient Etruscan, Greek, and Roman jewelry. Like other nineteenth-century jewelers, Melillo shared the Campanas’ interest in the classical subjects and forms depicted by such artifacts from the Mediterranean world.
ProvenanceBy 1930, Edward Jackson Holmes (b. 1846 - d. 1871), Boston; 1941, gift of Edward Jacson Holmes to the MFA. (Accession Date: December 11, 1941)Yvonne J. Markowitz, “Pair of Earrings” in Artful Adornments: Jewelry from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston by Yvonne J. Markowitz (Boston: MFA Publications, 2011), 114.