Thumbnail image for Campana plaqueThumbnail image for Campana plaqueThumbnail image for Campana plaque
Campana plaque

Campana plaque

An item at Louvre

below; palmette (reversed, frieze) Decoration: above; oves and darts (file) Dionysian scene; satyr (nude, nebrid, playing, tympanum, dancing); maenad (drapery, scarf, playing, aulos, dancing, followed by, panther); satyr (nebrid, holding, cantharus, thyrsus, dancing) Condition of the work: glued back together and completed in the 19th century (right part in 4 joined fragments)


Department of Greek, Etruscan and Roman Antiquities

An exhibit at Louvre

Campana plaqueCampana plaqueCampana plaqueCampana plaqueCampana plaque

The Department of Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities is home to a collection of artworks representing the Greek, Etruscan, and Roman civilizations; it illustrates the art of a vast area encompassing Greece, Italy, and the whole of the Mediterranean basin, and spans the period from Neolithic times (4th millennium BC) to the 6th century AD.