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Cameo (carving)

Cameo (/ˈkæmi/) is a method of carving an object such as an engraved gem, item of jewellery or vessel. It nearly always features a raised (positive) relief image; contrast with intaglio, which has a negative image.[1] Originally, and still in discussing historical work, cameo only referred to works where the relief image was of a contrasting colour to the background; this was achieved by carefully carving a piece of material with a flat plane where two contrasting colours met, removing all the first colour except for the image to leave a contrasting background.

The Great Cameo of France, five layers sardonyx, Rome, c. 23 AD, the largest of Antiquity
Eagle Cameo, Roman 27 B.C. Two-layered onyx.
Cameo of Roman Emperor Augustus wearing a gorgoneion and a sword-belt. Three-layered sardonyx cameo, Roman artwork, c. 14–20 AD.

A variation of a carved cameo is a cameo incrustation (or sulphide). An artist, usually an engraver, carves a small portrait, then makes a cast from the carving, from which a ceramic type cameo is produced. This is then encased in a glass object, often a paperweight. These are very difficult to make but were popular from the late 18th century through the end of the 19th century. Originating in Bohemia, the finest examples were made by the French glassworks in the early to mid-nineteenth century.[2]

Today the term may be used very loosely for objects with no colour contrast, and other, metaphorical, terms have developed, such as cameo appearance. This derives from another generalized meaning that has developed, the cameo as an image of a head in an oval frame in any medium, such as a photograph.

Technique edit

Ancient and Renaissance cameos were made from semi-precious gemstones,[3] especially the various types of onyx and agate, and any other stones with a flat plane where two contrasting colours meet; these are "hardstone" cameos. In cheaper modern work, shell and glass are more common. Glass cameo vessels, such as the famous Portland Vase, were also developed by the Romans.

Modern cameos can be produced by setting a carved relief, such as a portrait, onto a background of a contrasting colour. This is called an assembled cameo. Alternatively, a cameo can be carved by the traditional, but far more difficult, method directly out of a material with integral layers or banding, such as (banded) agate or layered glass, where different layers have different colours.

Sometimes dyes are used to enhance these colours.

History edit

 
Perfume bottle made of cameo glass found in the Roman necropolis of Ostippo (Spain). On side B shown above, two males are on a bed in an erotic scene. Side A of the bottle, not shown, shows a female and a male in an erotic scene. 25 BCE – 14 CE

Sir Wallis Budge alleged that the noun cameo apparently comes from kame'o, a word used in kabbalistic slang to signify a 'magical square', i.e. a kind of talisman whereupon magical spells were carved.[4]

Cameos are often worn as jewelry, but in ancient times were mainly used for signet rings and large earrings, although the largest examples were probably too large for this, and were just admired as objets d'art. Stone cameos of great artistry were made in Greece dating back as far as the 5th century BC.[5] The Farnese Tazza (a cup) is the oldest major Hellenistic piece surviving. They were very popular in Ancient Rome, especially in the family circle of Augustus. The most famous stone "state cameos" from this period are the Gemma Augustea, the Gemma Claudia made for the Emperor Claudius, and the largest flat engraved gem known from antiquity, the Great Cameo of France. Roman cameos became less common around in the years leading up to 300 AD, although production continued at a much reduced rate right through the Middle Ages.[6]

The technique has since enjoyed periodic revivals, notably in the early Renaissance, and again in the 18th and 19th centuries. The Neoclassical revival began in France with Napoleon's support of the glyptic arts, and even his coronation crown was decorated with cameos.

In Britain, this revival first occurred during King George III's reign, and his granddaughter, Queen Victoria, was a major proponent of the cameo trend, to the extent that they would become mass-produced by the second half of the 19th century.

The visual art form of the cameo has even inspired at least one writer of more recent times, the 19th-century Russian poet Lev Mei, who composed a cycle of six poems entitled Камеи (Cameos, 1861), as reflections on each of the Roman rulers from Julius Caesar to Nero. In 1852 Théophile Gautier titled a collection of his highly polished, lapidary poems Emaux et Camées (Enamels and Cameos).

Roman glass cameos edit

During the Roman period the cameo technique was used on glass blanks, in imitation of objects being produced in agate or sardonyx. Cameo glass objects were produced in two periods; between around 25 BC and 50/60 AD, and in the later Empire around the mid-third and mid-fourth century.[7] Roman glass cameos are rare objects, with only around two hundred fragments and sixteen complete pieces known,[7] only one of which dates from the later period.[8] During the early period they usually consisted of a blue glass base with a white overlying layer,[9] but those made during the later period usually have a colourless background covered with a translucent coloured layer.[8] Blanks could be produced by fusing two separately cast sheets of glass, or by dipping the base glass into a crucible of molten overlay glass during blowing.[9] The most famous example of a cameo from the early period is the Portland Vase.

 
Woman wearing a cameo at her throat, on a high lace collar in the Edwardian style

Shell cameos edit

Although occasionally used in Roman cameos, the earliest prevalent use of shell for cameo carving was during the Renaissance, in the 15th and 16th centuries. Before that time, cameos were carved from hardstone. The Renaissance cameos are typically white on a grayish background and were carved from the shell of a mussel or cowry, the latter a tropical mollusk.

In the mid 18th century, explorations revealed new shell varieties. Helmet shells (Cassis tuberosa) from the West Indies, and queen conch shells (Eustrombus gigas) from the Bahamas and West Indies, arrived in Europe. This sparked a big increase in the number of cameos that were carved from shells. Conch shells carve very well, but their color fades over time.

After 1850 demand for cameos grew, as they became popular souvenirs of the Grand Tour among the middle class.[10]

Cameo subjects edit

Classically the designs carved onto cameo stones were either scenes of Greek or Roman mythology or portraits of rulers or important dignitaries. In history, agate portrait cameos were often gifts from royalty to their subjects. These antique cameos, some more than 2000 years old, are either displayed in museums or are in private collections.

Notable historic cameos edit

 
The Gonzaga Cameo in the Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg. The gem measures 15,7 x 11,8 cm.
  • Gemma Augustea Cameo – Roman, after 10 AD. Two-layered onyx.[11]
  • "Tazza Farnese". An ancient Hellenistic bowl made of a very large cameo and purchased by Lorenzo de' Medici during the Italian Renaissance.
  • Cup of the Ptolemies, a large Roman or Hellenistic vessel.
  • Portland Vase, the best known piece of cameo glass.
  • Great Cameo of France – Roman, c. 23 AD. Sardonyx.
  • Gemma Claudia Cameo – Roman, 49 AD. Five-layered onyx.[11]
  • Herophiloska Cameo – Roman, 14 to 37 AD. This portrait of a man with laurel wreath is probably of Emperor Tiberius. The work is signed Herophilos Dioskourid[ou] ('Herophilus, son of Dioscorides'). The colour of the glass was intended by the artist to imitate turquoise.[11]
  • "Gonzaga Cameo": Ptolemy II and Arsinoë II. Sardonyx. 3rd century BC.[12]
  • Agrippina the Elder Cameo. Carved in Italy in the period of 37–41 AD. The carving is a three layer agate.
  • Ptolemaic double cameo — Hellenistic, 278–270/269 BC. Eleven-layered onyx.[11]
  • Blacas Cameo: Roman, about 20–50 AD. This head of Augustus was carved from a four-layered sardonyx. It is a fragment of a larger portrait of the Roman emperor-Augustus.[13]
  • "The head of Flora Cameo" – Benedetto Pistrucci. 1812 AD. In this cameo the top red-brown layer has been carved into roses. The face is carved from the white layer. The collector Richard Payne Knight purchased the Flora cameo from an Italian dealer, believing it to be Roman. The Italian carver Pistrucci claimed to have carved it himself. Payne challenged Pistrucci to carve a copy to prove his claim. The ensuing publicity earned Pistrucci several commissions.[14]
  • Schaffhausen onyx – Roman, Augustan-era, depicting Pax Augusta or Felicitas

Modern cameos edit

 
A modern hand-carved portrait cameo of white on blue-layered agate, set in 18 kt white gold

Many modern cameos are carved into layered agates. The layers are dyed to create strong color contrasts. The most usual colors used for two-layer stones are white on black, white on blue, and white on red-brown. Three-layer stones are sometimes made. The colors are usually black on white on black. The layers are translucent; this allows the artist to create shading effects by removing material to allow the background layer to show through. This way a very realistic, lifelike quality to a figure can be achieved. For example, thinning the top black layer on a three-layer stone changes its color to shades of brown. Removing material from the white layer creates shades of blue or grey, depending on the color of the base.

Ultrasonic machine carved cameos edit

The majority of modern agate cameos are carved with the aid of the Ultrasonic Mill. This is a process where multiple copies of a master design can be produced very quickly by pressing a master die onto the agate cameo blank. A film of diamond slurry is used to aid cutting and the die vibrates ultrasonically in a vertical motion. The master is often hand carved by a skilled cameo artist. The result is a cameo that has a satin surface texture described as "freshly fallen snow" (FFS) by Anna Miller.[15] This texture and the lack of any undercutting are used by appraisers as markers to prove that the cameo is machine-made.

Hand-worked portrait cameos edit

These cameos are carved by hand, usually working from photographs of the subject. The fact that there is usually only one copy made means that the tooling costs involved rule out the ultrasonic carving process.

There are very few people working in this field, as this is one of the hardest challenges for any gemstone carver. The combination of a highly developed artistic ability, craft skill and many years of experience are needed to be able to create lifelike portraits.

It is quite rare, these days, for subjects other than portraits to be carved by hand as agate cameos. The traditional themes of classical scenes from mythology or a standard image of a young lady, are more likely to be made with the help of the ultrasonic carving machine as a limited collection of typically 50–200 pieces.

Shell cameos edit

 
A cameo carved into the dorsum of a shell of the tiger cowry, Cypraea tigris

Since the late 19th century, the species most used in good-quality cameos has been Cypraecassis rufa, the bullmouth helmet, the shell of which can be up to 6 inches long. In this species, the upper shell layer is whitish, and the lower shell layer is a rich orange-brown. Modern sources for this shell are Madagascar and South Africa. The finest hand-carving of these shells takes place in Italy.

The most highly prized shell for carving is the emperor or queen's helmet shell, Cassis madagascariensis. This shell has white and dark brown layers and is known as sardonyx shell, and looks similar to the layered agate known as sardonyx. This shell is found in the waters of the Caribbean.

 
Cameo carved on Cassis madagascariensis by Ascione manufacture, 1925, Naples, Coral and Cameo Jewellery Museum Ascione

The world center for cameo carving in shell is Torre del Greco, Italy. The shells are first marked with a series of ovals in a process called signing, then cut into oval blanks for the cameo carver. The actual cameo is mainly cut with a metal scraping tool called a bulino, an invention of Jewish artisan Antonio Cimeniello. A number of metal gravers are used: flat-faced, round and three-cornered. To speed production, grinding wheels are used to quickly remove excess material. When the details are completed, the shell is then soaked in olive oil, cleaned with soap and water and selectively polished with a hand brush.

Notable carvers edit

  • Giovanni Noto (1902–1985)-Torre del Greco, Italy
  • Tommaso Saulini (1793–1864)-Rome, Italy
  • Luigi Saulini (1819–1883)-Rome, Italy, (son of Tommaso)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tait, Hugh, ed. (2006). 7000 Years of Jewellery. British Museum Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-7141-5032-1.
  2. ^ Dunlop, Paul H., The Jokelson Collection of Cameo Incrustation, Papier Presse (1991) ISBN 0-9619547-3-6
  3. ^ Ting Morris (1 August 2006). Arts and Crafts of Ancient Rome. Black Rabbit Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-58340-913-8.[dead link]
  4. ^ E. A. Wallis Budge, Amulets and Talismans, University Book, Inc., 1968, page 390-393.
  5. ^ "Cameo Appearances". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Metropolitan Museum of Art. from the original on 2021-10-23. Retrieved 2021-10-23.
  6. ^ Tait, Hugh, ed. (2006). 7000 Years of Jewellery. British Museum Press. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-7141-5032-1.
  7. ^ a b Whitehouse, D., Cameo Glass, in Roman Glass: two centuries of art and invention, M. Newby and K. Painter, Editors. 1991, Society of Antiquaries of London: London.
  8. ^ a b Whitehouse, D., Late Roman cameo glass, in Annales du 11e Congres. 1990: Amsterdam.
  9. ^ a b Fleming, S.J., Roman Glass; reflections on cultural change. 1999, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
  10. ^ Malcolm, Fiona (2008). "Vintage beauty". The National Trust Magazine. National Trust (Autumn 200): 37.
  11. ^ a b c d Cameo collection at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna
  12. ^ Saint-Petersburg, The State Hermitage Museum
  13. ^ The British Museum, London.
  14. ^ Leonard Forrer. Biographical dictionary of medallists: coin, gem, and seal engravers, mint-masters, etc., volume 4 (London: Spink & son, 1904) p. 582 ff.
  15. ^ Anna Miller. Cameos Old and New. ISBN 978-0-943763-60-6

Bibliography edit

  • Jarrett, Diana (2009). Cameos Old and New- 4th Edition. ISBN 978-0-943763-60-6.
  • Miller, Anne (2003). Cameos Old and New. ISBN 0-442-00278-5.
  • Draper, James (2009). Cameo Appearances: Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art. ISBN 978-0-300-14145-0.
  • Dunlop, Paul H., The Jokelson Collection of Cameo Incrustation, ISBN 0-9619547-3-6
  • Scarisbrick, Dianna (2003). Classical Gems: Ancient and Modern Intaglios and Cameos in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-521-23901-1.
  • Henig, Martin (1990). The Content Family Collection of Ancient Cameos-Ashmolean Museum. ISBN 978-1-85444-004-4.
  • Fiorelli, Anna (1989). Corals and Cameos – The treasures of Torre Del Greco.
  • Walters, H.B (1927). Catalogue of the Engraved Gems and Cameos, Greek, Etruscan, and Roman in the British Museum.
  • Neverov, O (1971). Antique Cameos in the Hermitage Collection. Aurora Art Publishers.

External links edit

  • Antique Cameos in the Hermitage Museum
  • Gareth Eckley (cameo-artist)
  • August Rudolf Wild 1891-1956, Gemmenschneider (cameo-artist)
  • Gerhard Schmidt, Gemmenschneider (cameo-artist)

cameo, carving, cameo, method, carving, object, such, engraved, item, jewellery, vessel, nearly, always, features, raised, positive, relief, image, contrast, with, intaglio, which, negative, image, originally, still, discussing, historical, work, cameo, only, . Cameo ˈ k ae m i oʊ is a method of carving an object such as an engraved gem item of jewellery or vessel It nearly always features a raised positive relief image contrast with intaglio which has a negative image 1 Originally and still in discussing historical work cameo only referred to works where the relief image was of a contrasting colour to the background this was achieved by carefully carving a piece of material with a flat plane where two contrasting colours met removing all the first colour except for the image to leave a contrasting background The Great Cameo of France five layers sardonyx Rome c 23 AD the largest of AntiquityEagle Cameo Roman 27 B C Two layered onyx Cameo of Roman Emperor Augustus wearing a gorgoneion and a sword belt Three layered sardonyx cameo Roman artwork c 14 20 AD A variation of a carved cameo is a cameo incrustation or sulphide An artist usually an engraver carves a small portrait then makes a cast from the carving from which a ceramic type cameo is produced This is then encased in a glass object often a paperweight These are very difficult to make but were popular from the late 18th century through the end of the 19th century Originating in Bohemia the finest examples were made by the French glassworks in the early to mid nineteenth century 2 Today the term may be used very loosely for objects with no colour contrast and other metaphorical terms have developed such as cameo appearance This derives from another generalized meaning that has developed the cameo as an image of a head in an oval frame in any medium such as a photograph Contents 1 Technique 2 History 2 1 Roman glass cameos 2 2 Shell cameos 2 3 Cameo subjects 2 4 Notable historic cameos 3 Modern cameos 3 1 Ultrasonic machine carved cameos 3 2 Hand worked portrait cameos 3 3 Shell cameos 4 Notable carvers 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksTechnique editAncient and Renaissance cameos were made from semi precious gemstones 3 especially the various types of onyx and agate and any other stones with a flat plane where two contrasting colours meet these are hardstone cameos In cheaper modern work shell and glass are more common Glass cameo vessels such as the famous Portland Vase were also developed by the Romans Modern cameos can be produced by setting a carved relief such as a portrait onto a background of a contrasting colour This is called an assembled cameo Alternatively a cameo can be carved by the traditional but far more difficult method directly out of a material with integral layers or banding such as banded agate or layered glass where different layers have different colours Sometimes dyes are used to enhance these colours History editMain article Engraved gem nbsp Perfume bottle made of cameo glass found in the Roman necropolis of Ostippo Spain On side B shown above two males are on a bed in an erotic scene Side A of the bottle not shown shows a female and a male in an erotic scene 25 BCE 14 CESir Wallis Budge alleged that the noun cameo apparently comes from kame o a word used in kabbalistic slang to signify a magical square i e a kind of talisman whereupon magical spells were carved 4 Cameos are often worn as jewelry but in ancient times were mainly used for signet rings and large earrings although the largest examples were probably too large for this and were just admired as objets d art Stone cameos of great artistry were made in Greece dating back as far as the 5th century BC 5 The Farnese Tazza a cup is the oldest major Hellenistic piece surviving They were very popular in Ancient Rome especially in the family circle of Augustus The most famous stone state cameos from this period are the Gemma Augustea the Gemma Claudia made for the Emperor Claudius and the largest flat engraved gem known from antiquity the Great Cameo of France Roman cameos became less common around in the years leading up to 300 AD although production continued at a much reduced rate right through the Middle Ages 6 The technique has since enjoyed periodic revivals notably in the early Renaissance and again in the 18th and 19th centuries The Neoclassical revival began in France with Napoleon s support of the glyptic arts and even his coronation crown was decorated with cameos In Britain this revival first occurred during King George III s reign and his granddaughter Queen Victoria was a major proponent of the cameo trend to the extent that they would become mass produced by the second half of the 19th century The visual art form of the cameo has even inspired at least one writer of more recent times the 19th century Russian poet Lev Mei who composed a cycle of six poems entitled Kamei Cameos 1861 as reflections on each of the Roman rulers from Julius Caesar to Nero In 1852 Theophile Gautier titled a collection of his highly polished lapidary poems Emaux et Camees Enamels and Cameos Roman glass cameos edit During the Roman period the cameo technique was used on glass blanks in imitation of objects being produced in agate or sardonyx Cameo glass objects were produced in two periods between around 25 BC and 50 60 AD and in the later Empire around the mid third and mid fourth century 7 Roman glass cameos are rare objects with only around two hundred fragments and sixteen complete pieces known 7 only one of which dates from the later period 8 During the early period they usually consisted of a blue glass base with a white overlying layer 9 but those made during the later period usually have a colourless background covered with a translucent coloured layer 8 Blanks could be produced by fusing two separately cast sheets of glass or by dipping the base glass into a crucible of molten overlay glass during blowing 9 The most famous example of a cameo from the early period is the Portland Vase nbsp Woman wearing a cameo at her throat on a high lace collar in the Edwardian styleShell cameos edit Although occasionally used in Roman cameos the earliest prevalent use of shell for cameo carving was during the Renaissance in the 15th and 16th centuries Before that time cameos were carved from hardstone The Renaissance cameos are typically white on a grayish background and were carved from the shell of a mussel or cowry the latter a tropical mollusk In the mid 18th century explorations revealed new shell varieties Helmet shells Cassis tuberosa from the West Indies and queen conch shells Eustrombus gigas from the Bahamas and West Indies arrived in Europe This sparked a big increase in the number of cameos that were carved from shells Conch shells carve very well but their color fades over time After 1850 demand for cameos grew as they became popular souvenirs of the Grand Tour among the middle class 10 Cameo subjects edit Classically the designs carved onto cameo stones were either scenes of Greek or Roman mythology or portraits of rulers or important dignitaries In history agate portrait cameos were often gifts from royalty to their subjects These antique cameos some more than 2000 years old are either displayed in museums or are in private collections Notable historic cameos edit nbsp The Gonzaga Cameo in the Hermitage Museum St Petersburg The gem measures 15 7 x 11 8 cm Gemma Augustea Cameo Roman after 10 AD Two layered onyx 11 Tazza Farnese An ancient Hellenistic bowl made of a very large cameo and purchased by Lorenzo de Medici during the Italian Renaissance Cup of the Ptolemies a large Roman or Hellenistic vessel Portland Vase the best known piece of cameo glass Great Cameo of France Roman c 23 AD Sardonyx Gemma Claudia Cameo Roman 49 AD Five layered onyx 11 Herophiloska Cameo Roman 14 to 37 AD This portrait of a man with laurel wreath is probably of Emperor Tiberius The work is signed Herophilos Dioskourid ou Herophilus son of Dioscorides The colour of the glass was intended by the artist to imitate turquoise 11 Gonzaga Cameo Ptolemy II and Arsinoe II Sardonyx 3rd century BC 12 Agrippina the Elder Cameo Carved in Italy in the period of 37 41 AD The carving is a three layer agate Ptolemaic double cameo Hellenistic 278 270 269 BC Eleven layered onyx 11 Blacas Cameo Roman about 20 50 AD This head of Augustus was carved from a four layered sardonyx It is a fragment of a larger portrait of the Roman emperor Augustus 13 The head of Flora Cameo Benedetto Pistrucci 1812 AD In this cameo the top red brown layer has been carved into roses The face is carved from the white layer The collector Richard Payne Knight purchased the Flora cameo from an Italian dealer believing it to be Roman The Italian carver Pistrucci claimed to have carved it himself Payne challenged Pistrucci to carve a copy to prove his claim The ensuing publicity earned Pistrucci several commissions 14 Schaffhausen onyx Roman Augustan era depicting Pax Augusta or FelicitasModern cameos edit nbsp A modern hand carved portrait cameo of white on blue layered agate set in 18 kt white goldMany modern cameos are carved into layered agates The layers are dyed to create strong color contrasts The most usual colors used for two layer stones are white on black white on blue and white on red brown Three layer stones are sometimes made The colors are usually black on white on black The layers are translucent this allows the artist to create shading effects by removing material to allow the background layer to show through This way a very realistic lifelike quality to a figure can be achieved For example thinning the top black layer on a three layer stone changes its color to shades of brown Removing material from the white layer creates shades of blue or grey depending on the color of the base Ultrasonic machine carved cameos edit The majority of modern agate cameos are carved with the aid of the Ultrasonic Mill This is a process where multiple copies of a master design can be produced very quickly by pressing a master die onto the agate cameo blank A film of diamond slurry is used to aid cutting and the die vibrates ultrasonically in a vertical motion The master is often hand carved by a skilled cameo artist The result is a cameo that has a satin surface texture described as freshly fallen snow FFS by Anna Miller 15 This texture and the lack of any undercutting are used by appraisers as markers to prove that the cameo is machine made Hand worked portrait cameos edit These cameos are carved by hand usually working from photographs of the subject The fact that there is usually only one copy made means that the tooling costs involved rule out the ultrasonic carving process There are very few people working in this field as this is one of the hardest challenges for any gemstone carver The combination of a highly developed artistic ability craft skill and many years of experience are needed to be able to create lifelike portraits It is quite rare these days for subjects other than portraits to be carved by hand as agate cameos The traditional themes of classical scenes from mythology or a standard image of a young lady are more likely to be made with the help of the ultrasonic carving machine as a limited collection of typically 50 200 pieces Shell cameos edit nbsp A cameo carved into the dorsum of a shell of the tiger cowry Cypraea tigrisSince the late 19th century the species most used in good quality cameos has been Cypraecassis rufa the bullmouth helmet the shell of which can be up to 6 inches long In this species the upper shell layer is whitish and the lower shell layer is a rich orange brown Modern sources for this shell are Madagascar and South Africa The finest hand carving of these shells takes place in Italy The most highly prized shell for carving is the emperor or queen s helmet shell Cassis madagascariensis This shell has white and dark brown layers and is known as sardonyx shell and looks similar to the layered agate known as sardonyx This shell is found in the waters of the Caribbean nbsp Cameo carved on Cassis madagascariensis by Ascione manufacture 1925 Naples Coral and Cameo Jewellery Museum AscioneThe world center for cameo carving in shell is Torre del Greco Italy The shells are first marked with a series of ovals in a process called signing then cut into oval blanks for the cameo carver The actual cameo is mainly cut with a metal scraping tool called a bulino an invention of Jewish artisan Antonio Cimeniello A number of metal gravers are used flat faced round and three cornered To speed production grinding wheels are used to quickly remove excess material When the details are completed the shell is then soaked in olive oil cleaned with soap and water and selectively polished with a hand brush Notable carvers editGiovanni Noto 1902 1985 Torre del Greco Italy Tommaso Saulini 1793 1864 Rome Italy Luigi Saulini 1819 1883 Rome Italy son of Tommaso See also editCross of Lothair contains in its center the three layered cameo of the Roman Emperor Augustus Jasperware popular ceramic imitation of cameosReferences edit Tait Hugh ed 2006 7000 Years of Jewellery British Museum Press p 216 ISBN 978 0 7141 5032 1 Dunlop Paul H The Jokelson Collection of Cameo Incrustation Papier Presse 1991 ISBN 0 9619547 3 6 Ting Morris 1 August 2006 Arts and Crafts of Ancient Rome Black Rabbit Books p 26 ISBN 978 1 58340 913 8 dead link E A Wallis Budge Amulets and Talismans University Book Inc 1968 page 390 393 Cameo Appearances Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 2021 10 23 Retrieved 2021 10 23 Tait Hugh ed 2006 7000 Years of Jewellery British Museum Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 7141 5032 1 a b Whitehouse D Cameo Glass in Roman Glass two centuries of art and invention M Newby and K Painter Editors 1991 Society of Antiquaries of London London a b Whitehouse D Late Roman cameo glass in Annales du 11e Congres 1990 Amsterdam a b Fleming S J Roman Glass reflections on cultural change 1999 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology Malcolm Fiona 2008 Vintage beauty The National Trust Magazine National Trust Autumn 200 37 a b c d Cameo collection at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Saint Petersburg The State Hermitage Museum The British Museum London Leonard Forrer Biographical dictionary of medallists coin gem and seal engravers mint masters etc volume 4 London Spink amp son 1904 p 582 ff Anna Miller Cameos Old and New ISBN 978 0 943763 60 6Bibliography editJarrett Diana 2009 Cameos Old and New 4th Edition ISBN 978 0 943763 60 6 Miller Anne 2003 Cameos Old and New ISBN 0 442 00278 5 Draper James 2009 Cameo Appearances Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art ISBN 978 0 300 14145 0 Dunlop Paul H The Jokelson Collection of Cameo Incrustation ISBN 0 9619547 3 6 Scarisbrick Dianna 2003 Classical Gems Ancient and Modern Intaglios and Cameos in the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge ISBN 978 0 521 23901 1 Henig Martin 1990 The Content Family Collection of Ancient Cameos Ashmolean Museum ISBN 978 1 85444 004 4 Fiorelli Anna 1989 Corals and Cameos The treasures of Torre Del Greco Walters H B 1927 Catalogue of the Engraved Gems and Cameos Greek Etruscan and Roman in the British Museum Neverov O 1971 Antique Cameos in the Hermitage Collection Aurora Art Publishers External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cameos nbsp Look up cameo in Wiktionary the free dictionary Antique Cameos in the Hermitage Museum Gareth Eckley cameo artist August Rudolf Wild 1891 1956 Gemmenschneider cameo artist Gerhard Schmidt Gemmenschneider cameo artist Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cameo carving amp oldid 1186663579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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