Treasures of Ancient Thrace
Portrait of King Seuthes III, 310-300 BCE. National Archaeological Institute with Museum, Sofia, Bulgaria. Photo: Todor Dimitrov |
I guess it's because Seuthes was king of Thrace, neglected by an art history that foregrounds Egypt, Greece, Rome, and (sometimes) Persia. The core of ancient Thrace is modern Bulgaria, off the usual cultural tourism track.
A new exhibition at the Getty Villa promises to make both Seuthes III and Thrace better known to American audiences. "Ancient Thrace and the Classical World: Treasures from Bulgaria, Romania, and Greece" (through Mar. 3, 2025) orchestrates about 200 loans from the aforementioned nations and others. King Seuthes III's treasures fill a central gallery, but the show spans nearly two millennia of Thracian art and material culture. Many other recent discoveries are making their American debuts here. The exhibition demonstrates that the story of Thrace is still a work in progress.
Thracian inscription, 600-400 BCE. National Archaeological Institute with Museum, Sofia, Bulgaria |
Thrace was an eclectic crossroads of visual culture, drawing on Greek, Persian, and Roman influences. The "Thracian Horseman" was a folk hero celebrating the region's horsemanship. In a Votive Relief of Moukianos the cult of the Horseman has merged with that of the Greek Apollo.
The famous bronze head of Seuthes III was probably commissioned from a Greek artist. The alabaster and glass eyes and unruly facial hair show the naturalism of the early Hellenistic period. Given the lack of Thracian history books, we don't know much about Seuthes III. His wife was named Berenike, and some of her possessions were found in the tomb as well. We don't know III's relation to I and II (not necessarily direct ancestors), or to an even more sketchy IV.
Wine Cup, 350-250 BCE. Isra Historical Museum, Kazanlak. Photo: Todor Dimitrov |
Shell-shaped container, 350-250 BCE. Iskra Historical Museum, Kazanlak |
Three-part vessel, 1500-1000 BCE. National Archeological Institute with Museum, Sofia |
Spouted Wine Vessel, 325-275 BCE. Regional Archaeological Museum, Plovdiv. Photo: Todor Dimitrov |
Another gallery shows the Panagyurishte Treasure, discovered by three brothers in the Bulgarian town of that name in 1949. Its nine 24-carat gold vessels together weigh over 13 pounds. The form of the Spouted Wine Vessel is Persian, but the centaurs and infant Herakles are Greek intellectual property.
The treasure's Offering Dish has almost psychedelic ornament of African male heads, acorns, and space-filling arabesques.
Relief with Two Thracians, 500-480 BCE. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Vorderasiatisches Museum. Photo: Olaf M. Teßmer/Art Resource, NY |
The Berlin relief is a Persian view of Thracians paying tribute to the Achaemenid king. Thracians were known for having red hair and wearing pointed caps made of fox skin.
Comments
Meanwhile, LACMA is currently featuring exhibits of Simone Leigh and Josiah McElheny.
> It's just newer and now-er. It might
> even be said to be worse, given the
> cramped narrowness today driving
> the entire institution. LACMA might
> be a de facto museum of contemporary
> art, but frankly it's not a very good one.
-- LA Times, May 2023
And now less square footage than before, but way more windows.
Metropolitan Museum of Art bulletin New ser., v. 35, no. 1 (Summer, 1977)
https://cdn.sanity.io/files/cctd4ker/production/5dc6234cd07b83ab06067d5bfcbdb3670b1f9961.pdf
1500–1000 BCE, National Archaeological Institute with Museum, Sofia