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bowl

Object NameShallow Bowl (Phiale)
Made FromGlass
Dateabout 450-330 BCE
Place Madepossibly Western Turkey; possibly Greece, Rhodes; possibly Macedonia
TechniqueCast or sagged, cut, polished
SizeOverall H: 3.2 cm; Rim Diam (max): 17.5 cm
Accession Number59.1.578
Curatorial Area(s)
Exhibitions
The Art of Glass: Masterpieces from The Corning Museum of Glass
Masterpieces of Glass from The Corning Museum of Glass
A Tribute to Persia
On ViewAncient Gallery
Interpretive Notes
After the Assyrian kingdom was destroyed in 612 B.C., the casting of glass nearly disappeared. It was revived in the Achaemenid Empire during the fifth century. The Achaemenids were the rulers of Persia, and their glass industry focused on the manufacture of luxury table wares that imitated rock crystal. This type of broad, flat bowl, used for drinking or pouring libations, was widely used throughout the empire. The most luxurious of these objects were made of gold, rock crystal, silver, and glass. Fragments of two dozen cast and cut glass vessels, including a bowl of this kind, were found at Persepolis, one of the empire’s capitals. It is not certain when they were made, but it must have been before the destruction of the palace complex by Alexander the Great in 331 B.C.
Physical DescriptionShallow Bowl (Phiale). Greenish glass, bubbly with frosted surface and patches of thin iridescent film; cast or sagged, cut, polished. Rounded rim flares out gently from almost straight-sided form with shallow convex bottom, the carination between side and bottom is highlighted with two lathe-cut grooves; the bottom of the vessel retains an omphalos from which radiate 32 flutes with rounded tops; each flute is relief-cut and concave in cross section.
Provenance
Source Wilhelm Henrich - 1959-08-06
lagynos
99 BCE-75 CE
Spearhead Flask
about 901-999
table
Compagnie des Verreries et Cristalleries de Baccarat
table made in 1889; boat made in 1900
bottle
about 1000-1099
bottle
900-1025