Arte Primitivo
A Romano-Egyptian Green Glass Bangle, Roman Period, ca. 1st - 3rd century CE
A Romano-Egyptian Green Glass Bangle, Roman Period, ca. 1st - 3rd century CE
A small glass bracelet, probably for a child, formed from bright ribbed green glass with thick sides and shaped into a bangle.
Dimensions: Diameter: 1 3/4 inches (4.4 cm)
Condition: Intact and in excellent condition overall.
Provenance: Dr. Edna (Ann) R. Russmann private collection, Brooklyn, acquired 1970 - early 1990s. Edna Russmann joined the Brooklyn Museum in 1989, as a research associate, a position she held until 1998, when she was named Associate Curator and in 2000, Curator. Prior to joining the Brooklyn Museum, she was Visiting Curator at the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Associate Curator in the Department of Egyptian Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and was a William Stevenson Smith Curatorial Fellow at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Dr. Russmann is the curator of Unearthing the Truth: Egypt’s Pagan and Coptic Sculpture, on view February 13 through May 19, 2009. She was Guest Curator of Temples and Tombs: Treasures of Egyptian Art from the British Museum and Eternal Egypt: Masterworks of Ancient Art from the British Museum, both organized and circulated by the American Federation of Arts. She has served as a consultant for a number of exhibitions and reinstallations at several major museums throughout the United States. The recipient of a B.A. in History from New York University, Dr. Russmann was awarded an M.A. and Ph.D. in Egyptian and Ancient Near Eastern Art from the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University.