Time is the wisest counselor of all.
~Pericles
Inner Peristyle of the Getty Villa
Back on March 30th, I drove to Malibu to meet my sister Penny and her friend Chris, at the Getty Villa. It was a beautiful day to have a little lunch and take a trip back in time!
Fragment of a Female Head
Greek, made in Taras, South Italy
440-430 B.C.
Terracotta
History of the Getty Villa, which is the same short film (12:22) that you can watch when you enter the Villa!
Wreath
Greek, 300-100 B.C.
Gold
"Gold wreaths were often modeled after the floral wreaths given as prizes in athletic contests. Here the leaves and berries imitate those of the laurel, a tree sacred to Apollo, got of prophecy and music. The wreath's fragility suggests that it was not intended to be worn in life but would have served as a funerary offering or a dedication to a deity." (Although, I would totally rock this wreath during the holidays!)
The Secret of change
is to focus all of your energy,
not on fighting the old,
but on building the new.
~Socrates
In the area below, at the end of summer, they put on productions of Greek plays! I've been wanting to go for years. I need to get it together this year!
Mask of a Satyr
Greek, made in the eastern Meditteranean,
300-100 B.C.
Terracotta and pigment
And so hail to you, Dionysos, god of abundant grapes!
Grant that we may come again rejoicing to this season
and from that season onward for many a year.
~Homeric Hymn to Dionysos, about 680 B.C.
Roman, A.D. 140-70
Marble
and Bacchus and Ariadne (above)
Roman, A.D. 1-75
Plaster and pigment
Lovely Venus/Aphrodite!
Altar with Aphrodite and Adonis
Greek, made in Taras, South Italy
400-375 B.C.
Terracotta and pigment
Statuette of Venus
Greek or Roman, 100-1 B.C.
Rock Crystal
This little statue is modeled after a large-scale sculpture of Venus crouching to bathe herself, that was made in the Hellenistic Period. That original has not survived but don't you love this crystal version? It was maybe 6 or 7 inches tall, if I remember correctly.
Count each day
as a separate life.
~Seneca (Roman philosopher circa 4 BCE-65 AD)
He is richest who is content with the least,
for contentment is the wealth of nature.
~Socrates
Slumbering figure of Eros, next to Hygieia's side.
Roman, A.D. 200-250
Marble
Looking down onto the inner peristyle (seen in the first photo) from the second floor.
Roman, 25-1 B.C.
Marble
Roman, A.D. 180-185
Marble
Greek, made in Athens, 500-490 B.C.
Terracotta
Red-figured kylix
True happiness is ... to enjoy the present
without anxious dependence on the future.
~Seneca
Mold-Blown Glass
Greek or Roman Glass Bowls
between 100 B.C.- A.D. 25
Roman, A.D. 1-100
Snake Bracelet
Romano-Egyptian, A.D. 1-100
Gold
Necklace with a Phoenician Pendant of a Bearded Man
Etruscan, 525-500 B.C.
Gold and glass
Roman, A.D. 200-400
Gold, garnet, emerald, glass, and chalcedony
Bracelet
Roman, A.D. 300-400
Gold, glass, emerald, and sapphire
(so gorgeous!!)
Egypt, 220-100 B.C.
(Need something fabulous to cover your bun?!)
Earring with Nike Pendants
Greek, 225-175 B.C.
Gold and glass
... and going waaaaay back here!
Pregnant Female FigureEarly Cycladic, 2700-2300 B.C.
Marble
Harp Player
Early Cycladic, 2700-2300 B.C.
Marble
(Only one of a dozen known sculptures of its kind.)
They were selling these little olive trees ...
Roman, about A.D. 70
Plaster and pigment
Fresco
Below, my sister and her friend Chris.
What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments,
but what is woven into the lives of others.
~Pericles (Greek circa 495-429 BCE)
No man ever steps in the same river twice,
for it's not the same river,
and he's not the same Man.
~Heraclitus (circa 535-475 BCE)
That's my sis!
I used to love watching Huell Howser on PBS! Here is his visit to the villa. (He cracks me up. No one is ever more enthusiastic than Huell was!)
for the official website click here.
Hope you enjoyed the visit!
blessings and light!
Day by day,
what you choose,
what you think
and what you do
is who you become.
~Heraclitus (Greek from Ephesus 535-475 BCE)
5 comments:
OK, you've done it again . . .
another great cultural tour from Southern California.
I watched the videos (well, not all of the second one -- the narrator was too annoying), and was blown away by Getty's villa, the collections, the antiquities.
Thanks for your great pics, and sharing all this.
Rick
Such a magical place...feels like you're in Italy again. The variegated water lily leaves are stunning and that Roman glass!! Have you seen the jewelry that is made from fragments they find on digs? Its very cool...just google Roman glass jewelry. Lovely once again Lucinda and I do believe we have just about the same toenail polish!
A wonderful afternoon (and series).
What a wonderful collection of ancient art. The villa is pretty awesome too.
Lucinda I loved that visit. I would have thought I had died and gone to heaven. What a luxury to visit the places you go. Don't forget, Augustus would have barely been five feet tall.
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