Subscribe to Intelligent Life

RECENT ARTICLES


LITERATURE
Poetry slamming
A conversation with Siri Hustvedt
Love me, love my books
How dumb is your bestseller list?
"A Coney Island of the Mind"
Zilahy's "The Last Window-Giraffe"
Writing workshops
Herodotus and the oracle
"Things Fall Apart"
Book critics we like

MUSIC
The new boss of Proms
The playlist: Leonard Cohen
My "Rock Band" band
Orchestral pleasures in Abu Dhabi
Sparks perform everything
Rock critics we like
Letting Bach breathe (audio)
Bryce Morrison on Hattogate
Music as installation art
The Joyce Hatto affair

FINE & PERFORMING ARTS
A night of chamber opera
Micky Wolfson: the great persuader
Thank you, ancient Greece
Passion project
A conversation with Jacob Rothschild
Collecting collectors
Lift-off
Once upon a good deed
Watteau's moody surprise
"The Magic Flute" underground

FILM
"Brideshead" redeemed
Tribeca Film Festival
Watching "Shine A Light"
Martin Sheen for president
Smoking on screen
Film critics we like
East Germany on screen
I love the Oscars
Scott Burns
British Council film festival
"The Man from Earth"

FOOD & DRINK
Repasts: calves-foot jelly
Hélène Darroze
And with the snail porridge...
Glass warfare
Finally, a quiet meal
Insider trading: buying the right barbecue
Papa was an ice-cream maker
Become a Master of Wine
Goodbye Peroni, hello Pinot Noir
Tokyo food

ISSUES & IDEAS
Let's call it "atmosphere cancer"
Hidden depths
Recycle chic
What she's up against
Zaha Hadid
Notes on a nail salon
The letters page
Just marry him?
The science of humour
Nelson Mandela at 90

PHILANTHROPY
Does one abused woman = 100 abused puppies?
In pursuit of community
Robin Hood and the ARK
Your money or your life?
Donating to Afghanistan
One cause, or many?
Embedded giving
Giving for scholarship
Helping a beggar
Children and wealth
New Philanthropy Capital

PLACES
Global trading: apothecaries
Saskatchewan diary
Being there: Beijing
British pubs
Hit the hay
An outsider in the galleries
"The other Iraq"
The Texas-Mexico border
Travelling in south-west China
How to rent a lighthouse

SPORT
An Olympic game
Roof down, sales up
Cricket at Lords
Federer: dreaming of mastery
EURO 2008
World's sexiest brakes
Olympic memorabilia
Watch cricket
Marathon training
Remembering Munich
Against the London Olympics

TECHNOLOGY
Shall we play a game?
Nintendo, me, and your mom
Hanging out in Liberty City
The high art of "bioshock"
Robots get cuddly
Redesigning the dinosaur
Interactive clothing
David Weinberger
Ned Kahn
Swarming robots

MISCELLANY
Dress sense: sunglasses
The summer issue is here
Shocking pink
TV, theatre, pop culture critics
Are you being followed?
The spring issue is here
Sex diaries of Keynes
New York cabs
Benjamin Franklin
Hitler's digestion
Life as a handbag

BACK TO BACK

  • ART AND AUCTION

A MONUMENTAL TWO-HEADED ROMAN BUST AT BONHAMS | April 20th 2008

Bonhams

An ancient marble bust with delicate details and a curious provenance goes on sale next month. Fiammetta Rocco, Books and Arts editor of The Economist, explains why it may sell for a song ...

From ECONOMIST.COM*

Somerset Struben de Chair was an adventurous young British soldier stationed with the Royal Horse Guards in Palestine when he saw a larger-than-life marble bust displayed in the shop-window of an antique dealer named Ohan, opposite the King David Hotel in Jerusalem.

It was 1941 and the second world war had been going for two years. On entering the shop de Chair was startled to find that the bust was actually a double-headed figure; on one side was the face of Bacchus (or Dionysus as he is more often called) and on the other a garlanded Ariadne.

"After many visits and many cups of black coffee," he wrote in his diary, "I entered into a contract with Ohan, under which I paid a ten per cent deposit and gave my executors 18 months to pay the balance and collect it if I did not return from the battlefield."

Shortly after negotiating the bust's purchase, de Chair left Jerusalem to serve as an intelligence officer during the capture of Baghdad. He was wounded when the ruins of Palmyra came under fire from Italian and Vichy French forces, and evacuated back to Jerusalem.

While convalescing, he obtained an export licence for the bust. The marble was taken to the Rockefeller Museum, where a full-size plaster cast was taken, which is still on show there today. The bust was then packed and shipped home to Britain as "Wounded Officer's Kit".

After the war de Chair had a colourful career. He wrote poetry and novels, and became a right-wing Conservative member of parliament. He married four times. His last wife, Lady Juliet Wentworth-Stanley, brought a substantial inheritance to the marriage, including a £20m ($39.5m) art collection that included George Stubbs's magnificent "Whistlejacket", which the National Gallery bought in 1997.

Through it all the Roman bust (or herm: a statue that has a human head placed on a rectangular pillow and is used for architectural decoration) was the centrepiece of the main entrance hall of de Chair's home at Chilham Castle in Kent and later at St Osyth's Priory in Essex, where he lived until his death at the age of 84.

In the early 1980s, de Chair had the herm cleaned. It revealed that the bust had been carved from marmo lunense, a white marble from the quarries near the Italian town of Carrara, which has bluish-violet streaks which look like the moon on a cloudy night.

Both faces have shapely lips that are slightly parted, revealing their teeth. The noses are straight and the brows arched. But what is notable about the faces are the obvious tear ducts and the irises that are carved in a crescent. It is as if Ariadne is looking up at her lover, about to speak.

The herm was probably made as a special commission for the settlement of Beth Shan, just south of the Sea of Galilee, where it would have been used to mark a crossroads or a market corner, or on a doorway or entrance.

Situated on the main trade route to the Mediterranean, Beth Shan grew under Egyptian rule and later during the Bronze Age. Alexander the Great renamed it Scythopolis ("city of the Scythians") and made it one of the ten cities of the Decapolis.

By the first century AD it had become one of Palestine's most important cities, with colonnaded streets, many buildings and a theatre that could hold 7,000 people. Beth Shan continued to flourish through the later Roman and Byzantine period until an earthquake levelled it on January 18th 749.

De Chair's herm dates from shortly after Alexander's time. It is not the finest of carvings, but the noses are long and elegant and the hair, with its garlands of leaves and berries, is in very good condition. Bonhams estimates a price in line with recent sales, and lower than if this were a Hellenistic rather than a Roman statue--proof that even a beautiful antiquity with a story can still be affordable.

"The Beth Shan Bust" is part of the Bonhams antiquities sale in London on May 1st. Lot 221, Estimate £60,000-90,000 ($120,000-180,000).

(*Fiammetta Rocco writes the Art.view column on economist.com, and is the author of "The Miraculous Fever-tree".)

  • Add new comment
  • Printer-friendly version


FROM THE MAGAZINE



Our Summer 2008 issue is on newsstands now


Read the complete text of the Spring 2008 edition


Read the complete text of the Winter 2007 edition


Read the complete text of the Autumn 2007 edition

RECENT COMMENTS

  • On Heine's conversion
  • I think you are totally
  • We want more and more Don Quixote today.
  • Correction
  • Wow, just wanna say so many
  • China can't win
  • Its an ok but not great way to measure
  • Dirty thinking
  • Uh, yeah.
  • Population statistics


RSS: Fullposts

MIL

Intelligent Life | Copyright © The Economist Newspaper Limited 2008 | All rights reserved | Disclaimer | Terms and conditions | Intelligent Life magazine FAQs