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Cameo with the wedding of Cupid and Psyche, or an initiation rite

Signed by: Tryphon
Roman
Late Republican or Early Imperial Period
50–25 B.C.

Medium/Technique Onyx
Dimensions Overall: 3.7 x 4.5 x 0.6 cm (1 7/16 x 1 3/4 x 1/4 in.)
Credit Line Henry Lillie Pierce Fund
Accession Number99.101
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsJewelry / AdornmentCameos
Carved so that the figures cut from the stone's creamy white top layer stand out against the dark background of the lower layer, this cameo shows five winged children enacting a ceremony that fuses the marriage rite with initiation into the mysteries of the cult of Dionysus. Scenes of the Dionysiac mysteries, often with a child initiate, occur frequently in Roman art. Here the bridegroom Cupid's head is covered, as is usual for those undergoing initiation. The heavily robed and veiled bride is identifiable as Psyche (the Soul) by her dotted butterfly wings. A boy with volute-tipped wings holds the liknon, a ritual basket containing objects symbolizing fertility, over the heads of the bridal couple. Another winged child leads the blindfolded lovers forward by a ribbon; he holds a torch, which is associated with marriage because wedding processions took place at night. A figure at the right side of the composition indicates the marriage bed with a welcoming gesture.

The imagery of marriage is often combined with that of initiation in both Greek and Roman art: ancient brides were dressed and instructed before their weddings, and rituals of bathing and ecstatic rites echoed the ceremonies of marriage. These ancient initiation mysteries intrigued those rediscovering the Classical past. This piece, signed in Greek letters by the artist Tryphon, has been celebrated at least since the early seventeenth century in a sequence of famous collections, including that of the painter Peter Paul Rubens.

Catalogue Raisonné Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), p. 091.
DescriptionLayered onyx. Cameo. The wedding of Cupid and Psyche. Incised Greek inscription: "Tryphon made it."
ProvenanceBy 1572, discovered in ancient Sentinum, Italy, and sold in Venice [see note 1]. Possibly in the Este collection, Ferrara [see note 2]. By 1622, Peter Paul Rubens (b. 1577 - d. 1640), Antwerp [see note 3]. By 1646, Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Arundel (b. 1585 - d. 1646); by descent to his great-grandson, Henry Howard, 7th Duke of Norfolk (b. 1655 - d. 1701) and his wife, Mary Howard, Duchess of Norfolk (b. 1659 - d. 1705); bequeathed by Mary Howard to her second husband, John Germain (b. 1650 - d. 1718), 1st Bt.; bequeathed by John Germain to his second wife and widow, Elizabeth Berkeley Germain (b. 1680 - d. 1769); 1762, given by Elizabeth Germain to her great-niece, Mary Beauclerk (b. 1743 - d. 1812), upon her marriage to Lord Charles Spencer (b. 1740 - d. 1820); to his brother, George Spencer (b. 1789 – d. 1817), 4th Duke of Marlborough, Blenheim Palace; by descent to John Winston Spencer-Churchill (b. 1822 – d. 1883), 7th Duke of Marlborough, Blenheim Palace [see note 4]; June 28-July 1, 1875, Marlborough Gems sale, Christie, Manson and Woods, London, lot 160, collection sold en bloc to David Bromilow (d. 1898), Bitteswell Hall, Lutterworth; 1898, by descent to his daughter, Julia Harriet Mary Jary; June 26, 1899, sold by Mrs. Jary, The Marlborough Gems sale, Christie, Manson and Woods, London, lot 160, sold for £2,000 to W. T. Ready for Edward Perry Warren (b. 1860 – d. 1928), London; 1899, sold by Edward Perry Warren to the MFA for $16,502 [see note 5]. (Accession Date: January 1, 1899)

NOTES:
[1] According to a 1572 letter from Costanzo Felici to Ulisse Aldrovandi (see Giorgio Nonni, “Le nozze mistiche di Amore e Psiche: Storia di una gemma ellenistica ritrovata a Sentinum nel XVI secolo,” Studi umanistici piceni 15 (1995), pp. 169-78).
[2] A 16th century drawing attributed to Pirro Ligorio (b. 1512/13 - d. 1583), who served in the court of the Este, shows the cameo (see Maria Elisa Micheli, “Tryphon a Sentinum?” in Sentinum 295 a.C.: Sassoferrato 2006, 2300 anni dopo la battaglia, ed. by Maura Medri (Rome, 2008), fig. 1). It was reproduced in Jacob Spon, Recherches curieuses d'antiquité (Lyon, 1683), pp. 87-88, from a drawing in the collection of Pierre-Antoine de Rascas, Sieur de Bagarris (b. 1562 - d. 1620). It is also attributed to Ligorio by Philipp von Stosch, Gemmae antiquae caelatae (Amsterdam, 1724), LXX, p. 94, at which time it was in the Germain collection.
[3] The cameo is first mentioned in a March 31, 1622 letter in which Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc thanks Rubens for sending him casts of gems from his collection (see Marjon Van der Meulen, Petrus Paulus Rubens Antiquarius: Collector and Copyist of Antique Gems (Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands, 1975), p. 203 and Oleg Negerov, "Gems in the Collection of Rubens," Burlington Magazine 121, no. 916 (July 1979): p. 428). On the Rubens gem collection, see also Marjon Van der Meulen, Rubens: Copied after the Antique, vol. 1 (London, 1994); Kristin Lohse Belkin and Fiona Healy, A House of Art: Rubens as Collector (Antwerp, 2004); and Jeffrey Spier, “Rubens and the Study of Ancient Gems,” in Rubens: Picturing Antiquity, ed. by Anne T. Woollett, Davide Gasparotto, and Jeffrey Spier (Los Angeles, 2021), pp. 57-69. It is unclear how and when Rubens parted with the cameo.
[4] On the history of the Marlborough Gem collection, see the introduction to the 1875 Christie's auction catalog and John Boardman, The Marlborough Gems (Oxford, 2010).
[5] This is the total price for MFA 99.101-99.119.