Patera Support: Lasa

300–175 BCE
Overall: 21.6 cm (8 1/2 in.)
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Location: 102D Pre-Roman

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Did You Know?

This elaborate figure served as a handle or support for a patera, a shallow dish.

Description

Standing on a triangular base, this winged female figure twists her body while admiring herself in the small mirror held in her left hand. Nearly nude, she wears sandals as well as a leopard or panther skin and jewelry inlaid with silver. Above her head and wings, a small portion of a patera, or shallow offering dish, survives. Inscriptions identify similar winged female figures elsewhere in Etruscan art as Lasas, often together with Turan (an Etruscan goddess analogous to the Greek Aphrodite).
Patera Support: Lasa

Patera Support: Lasa

300–175 BCE

Etruscan

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