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Repoussé plaque with a woman-bee hybrid

Greek, East Greek
Orientalizing Period
660–620 B.C.

Medium/Technique Electrum
Dimensions Height: 3 cm (1 3/16 in.); width: 2.7 cm (1 1/16 in.)
Credit Line Henry Lillie Pierce Fund
Accession Number99.397
ClassificationsJewelry / Adornment
Part-human, part-animal creatures in Greek art, such as the centaur and bee-woman pictured here, were inspired by the imagery of the ancient Near East. These miniature decorative plaques-over twenty of which are in the MFA's collection-come from the island of Rhodes, a crossroads of Greek and Near Eastern cultures. Many of them feature composite creatures, including sphinxes, griffins, and winged female figures holding either birds or lions. The sheen of electrum, an alloy of gold and silver that can occur naturally, brings out the details of the figures and adds an exotic elegance suitable for these otherworldly beasts.

Increased commercial contact between Greece and Near Eastern civilizations during the Orientalizing period exposed Greek artists to a visual tradition ripe for adaptation. Many Near Eastern cylinder seals show centaurs with the upper body and head of a man atop the full lower body of a horse. Early Greek representations of the centaur, in contrast, emphasize the human aspect of these creatures by attaching only a horse's hindquarters to the back of a complete male body.

Centaurs are quite common in Greek art and literature-for example, the centaur Cheiron was the tutor of Achilles, one of the heroes of the Trojan War-but the bee-woman appears to be a Rhodian invention, and her appearance in art is largely limited to plaques of this type. Some scholars associate the bee-woman with Artemis, the goddess of the hunt, who was often shown in the company of animals, but the identity and significance of the bee-woman remain obscure.

Catalogue Raisonné Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), p. 158.
DescriptionOn this plaque, a winged hybrid creature that fuses a woman’s head and torso with a bee’s bottom is depicted. The goddess has heavy striated hair, typical of the Daedalic style. Her wings curve in dramatically and are decorated with curving lines. She holds her arms out perpendicular to her waist, her hands clenched into fists. Her waist is marked by a sort of belt with vertical striations, while her bee bottom is horizontally striped. On either side of the figure, just beneath her arms, are two large rosettes. The entire composition is bordered by a braided pattern, and further decorated on top by a row of 14 darts. The central and right cylinder at the top of the plaque are preserved, as is part of the left cylinder. The bottom left corner of the plaque has broken off.
ProvenanceBy date unknown: W. H. Forman Collection; inherited from him by Mrs. Burt and then, about 1889, by A. H. Browne; by 1899: with Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge, 13 Wellington Strand, London, W.C. (sale of the Forman collection, June 19-22, lot 397, partial; said to have come from Camirus); 1899: with Edward Perry Warren; 1899: purchased by MFA from Edward Perry Warren for $ 32,500.00 (this is the total price for MFA 99.338-99.542)