To the Island of Circe: Masterpieces of the Terranean Mint and the Hellenistic Derivatives (20 min)
Presenters
Emily Pearce Seigerman, Yale University Art Gallery
Abstract
Beginning in the Classical
period, master engravers of Magna Graecia struck coins of unparalleled beauty.
Like other poleis, the iconography of these reflected cultural fascinations and
histories relevant to divinities or personifications now considered mythic
characters. Exploring the presentations of these entities on coins west of
Athens from the fifth to the second centuries B.C.E. highlight not only the
striking resemblance to sculpture of the time, but specifically to
architectural relief carvings that well-document the transition from classical
to Hellenistic art forms. I argue that the revered coin engravers of Sicily and
their students not only mimicked but prescribed developing sculptural art forms
that would become famous through the empire-spread of Alexander the Great.
Starting with the obvious characters—Euainetos’s Arethusa and Choirion’s
Apollo—this paper explores coins as relief sculpture against objects found in
the Yale University Art Gallery Collection. Using coins from the classical period,
empire of Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic East, paired with
contemporary sculptural monuments, I will argue the didactic role of coins in
informing and transforming art forms in the ancient world. Rather than
proscriptive elements, coins should be studied as prescriptive elements in the
development of artistic function and form. Engraver depictions of cultural
style, dress, and civic infrastructure will be foremost evidence of coinage
pioneering typological scenes and styles celebrated in classical and
Hellenistic art.
AIA-1J