Greek appliqué of a Maenad
3rd - 2nd century BCE
MK&G collection 1917.199
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Greek appliqué of a Maenad
3rd - 2nd century BCE
MK&G collection 1917.199

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Roman statue of the goddess Luna
2nd century CE
Musée d’art et d’histoire de la Ville de Genève MF 1317
Greek amphora with a Satyr carrying a Silenos on his back, another satyr behind them
ca. 470 BCE (The Charmides Painter)
Museum of Fine Arts Boston 76.46
Greek votive relief of Selene with a crescent on her head, around her seven stars, and the signs of the zodiac
2nd - 3rd century CE
British Museum 1818,0214.1
Hermaphrodite with lamp
Why does the hermaphrodite need a lamp? To signify the completion of rebirth in the heavens; through the lamp’s flame, the soul dwelling in heaven can descend to earth.

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Etruscan statue of Perseus holding the head of Medusa
4th century BCE
MK&G collection 1929.22
Oil lamp
Candles or oil lamps are lit to meet the souls dwelling in the heavens, a practice that dates back to antiquity. Many of these lamps feature symbols of the soul's rebirth; for instance, this particular lamp depicts a lioness-woman with bird wings on her back, her left paw touching a vessel placed before her. This scene illustrates that the soul has emerged from the funerary vessel and ascended to the constellation of Leo to conceive a new celestial body; the swollen nipples indicate that the conception has already taken place and the rebirth of the soul has begun.
Greek bronze statue of a wild boar
6th century BCE
Harvard Art Museum 2012.211