An Etruscan Terracotta Antefix, ca. 6th century BCE

An Etruscan Terracotta Antefix, ca. 6th century BCE

$7,500.00
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In the form of a half-sized head of a man with black curls along the forehead and fine, pointed features. The delicately outlined almond-shaped eyes with dark pupils, high arched brows, high cheekbones, pointed nose, the full lips set in an archaic smile.  During the Archaic period, the workshops at Caere (modern Cerveteri) in southern Etruria produced a large number of architectural terracottas (friezes, covering plaques, acroteria, and antefixes) designed to decorate sacred buildings. Etruscan temples were largely built from perishable materials: wood, bricks, or blocks of tuff for the superstructure; stone for the base.  Antefixes, painted bright and garish colors, were placed at the ends of the roof tiles to decorate the plain structures, covering up the wooden beams and, perhaps more importantly, protecting them from the elements.  Terracotta was the favored material as it was cheap to make and easily replaceable. Additionally, antefixes were a spiritual prophylactic against the e

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