A Bride and A Drum 

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When I learn how old an object like this vase from Sicily is, it puts things into perspective. I was thrilled to see this in person at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York a couple of weeks ago. Dated to have been made between 300 and 200 B.C.E., this polychrome terracotta jar associated with weddings (i.e., lebes gamikos) was actually made for a tomb. Because the lid is fixed to the body, scholars believe it served purely a symbolic function.

According to the book Sicily: Art and Invention between Greece and Rome, it is 15 and 5/8 inches high and is from Centuripe, a town in Enna province that was at one time, one of Sicily’s biggest producers of ceramic objects. This vase illustrates the “elaborate applied decoration and refined polychrome tempera painting executed after firing” for which Centuripe was known. The scene shows a bride surrounded by attendants. A large frame drum is being played by one woman (Why I love it!).

Allison Scola Avatar

About the author

Allison Scola is founder, owner, and curator of Experience Sicily and the Cannoli Crawl. Named one of the experts for the 2019 New York Times Travel Show, Scola writes and lectures on Sicily and leads immersive tours and designs custom itineraries that delight discerning travelers. She has been featured on Rudy Maxa’s World with the Carey’s, America’s #1 Travel Radio Show and as the cannoli expert in the documentary Cannoli, Traditions Around the Table. Scola has lectured about Sicily at University of Pennsylvania, The New School, LIU Post University, Queens College, Westchester Italian Cultural Center, at high schools in the New York City metropolitan area, and at events in New York City.

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