Description
The pagan god Dionysos, reclining in a cart being drawn by oxen, returns to a small, round temple. He is shown beneath an open gable and an arch with scrolls of leaves; lotus buds also appear in the arch, and immediately behind Dionysos’s cart there is a vine with ripening grapes. This is the autumnal season of maturation, the time of year associated with mystical fulfillment anticipating the yearly cycle of death and a future rebirth— separated by a period of wintry dormancy. The god, associated with wine, now returns to his temple, both his home and place of worship. These concepts, widespread in the ancient world, were naturally associated with the idea of resurrection, making this image an appropriate theme for a tomb.
The deeply carved block was the top section of a niche in a tomb in late Roman Egypt, as attested by the type of soft limestone used, the style of carving straight back from the surface, and the bold approach to the figures with their large heads and exaggerated, parallel drapery folds covering indistinctly rendered bodies. The lotus buds on the arch above Dionysos support the association with Egypt.
- S. Zwirn
Bibliography
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