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Ancient Resource Auctions' online auction Saturday, August 1st, has over 375 lots of rare antiquities, ethnographic art



2024-04-20 09:37:18 Art & Entertainment

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Montrose, CA, USA, July 21, 2020 -- A Graeco-Roman mummified cat dating from the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD, a Roman marble head of a woman from the later 4th century AD, and a massive circa 3rd-1st century BC Hellenistic bronze trident are a few highlight lots in Ancient Resource Auctions? online-only Exceptional Summer Antiquities Discovery Sale slated for August 1st.

?It?s Auction 86 and we?re featuring an incredible assortment of antiquities from a wide variety of cultures,? said Gabriel Vandervort of Ancient Resource Auctions. He added, ?Buyers are bound to get some really wonderful pieces at great prices.? To preview all lots and to learn more, people can visit the Ancient Resource Auctions website, at www.AncientResourceAuctions.com.

The auction is up and online now for pre-bidding. It will go live on auction day, August 1st at 9 am Pacific time and will continue throughout the day. Up for bid are over 375 lots of authentic Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Near Eastern, Holy Land, Byzantine, Asian and Pre-Columbian antiquities, plus scarce examples of ethnographic art ? something for every level of collector.

The fantastic ancient Graeco-Roman mummified cat (est. $9,000-$12,000) consists of the body (still wrapped) and a modeled separate cartonnage head containing the skull of a small cat. The lot is accompanied by an x-ray taken in the early 1980s and is referenced in Hamilton Price's 1897 collection catalog. It was later auctioned by Sotheby?s in 1911.

The lovely Roman marble head of a woman with large eyes and attractive features also has a pre-sale estimate of $9,000-$12,000. The subject is wearing a diadem with central adornment, her hair stylized in stiff curls that frame her face with elaborate coif at back. Her features retain nice detail and show a gentle expression. The head is 10 inches tall.

The Hellenistic bronze trident, 48 ? inches by 12 ? inches, is of heavy construction with three long tines, each with rectangular profile and rounded tips. It?s a fantastic piece that is too heavy for any type of utilitarian use and was likely mounted on a long shaft and in the hands of a sculpture of the god Poseidon or other deity. It should hit $4,500-$6,000.

A set of four large Egyptian alabaster canopic jars (Late Period, circa 664-332 BC), each carved from a creamy stone with horizontal veins, is estimated to reach $9,000-$15,000. Each jar is well-hollowed with a low ledge around the rim to fit the lids (now lost). The largest jar is eight inches tall. Canopic jars were part of Egyptian funerary equipment, used to store the viscera of the deceased, with each jar holding a specific organ or part.

A gorgeous deep blue glazed ushabti (an Egyptian funerary figure meant to carry out heavy manual tasks on behalf of a person in the afterlife), 3rd Intermediate Period, circa 1075-945 BC, should bring $6,000-$8,000. The 5 ? inch mummiform ushabti, wearing a striated wig, has arms folded at the chest, holding hoes, a bag suspended at the center of the back.

readmore: https://www.prpocket.com/2020/07/ancient-resource-auctions-online-auction-saturday-august-1st.html

Company :-Ancient Resource Auctions

User :- Gabriel Vandervort

Email :-ancientresourceauctions@yahoo.com

Phone :-8184259633






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