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6. Handle Formed of Two Opposing Thumbs
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6. Handle Formed of Two Opposing Thumbs

Tomasso

Epoque 1st-2nd century A.D.

Medium Bronze

Dimension 22 cm (8⁵/₈ inches)

The present work is a rare Roman bronze handle modelled in the form of two thumbs. As with their Greek
predecessors, the Romans implemented elaborate ornamentation in the craft of their various vessel
handles. Cast in bronze, these handles were fashioned into a wide variety of forms, including serpents,
acrobats, deities, animals, and knotty tree branches. Notably, a pair of bronze handles in the form of human
hands were discovered in Pompeii. They are believed to have been used to carry large bowls, stoves, and
other heated vessels, allowing them to be conveniently lifted. This splendid example may have been used
to lift a cooking pail, which, when placed over a charcoal fire would have become extremely hot; in such
a context, a separately cast, cool bronze ‘hand’ would have been highly functional, providing a practical
solution for handling heated vessels safely.
The high regard for such elaborate Roman bronze handles during the eighteenth century is demonstrated
by a remarkably similar piece which can be found today in the British Museum (Figures 1& 2). Previously
part of the collection of renowned antiquarian Charles Townley, the British Museum’s handle reflects the
enduring appreciation for such objects by collectors and scholars of the period.

Epoque: 1st-2nd century A.D.

Medium: Bronze

Dimension: 22 cm (8⁵/₈ inches)

Provenance: Private collection, France
Jean-Philippe Mariaud de Serres, Galerie Serres, Paris, France
Private collection, United Kingdom

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Tomasso

European Sculpture from the Early Renaissance to the Neoclassical periods, Master Paintings and Ancient Art

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