OPEN TODAY UNTIL 17:00

MONEY. Tangible symbols in ancient Greece

ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXHIBITION

2 NOVEMBER 2017 - 15 APRIL 2018

THE EXHIBITION

The exhibition presented a different side of coins, which first appeared in the late 7th century BC. During antiquity, the coin had an additional use related to its iconography: it was a symbol, but also something that people could hold in their hands, making it a tangible symbol.

The exhibition was structured along eight themed units and exhibited 85 coins from the Alpha Bank Collection alongside 159 objects (clay vases, terracotta figurines, marble and bronze statuettes, reliefs, gold jewelry, measuring vessels, coins from closed assemblages and inscriptions) from 32 archaeological museums and collections in Greece, Italy, France and the United Kingdom. The iconography of these objects was linked directly to each unit’s symbolic content.

THEMATIC UNITS

Money and Transactions, Money and Trade, Money and Art, Money and History, Money and Circulation of Ideas, Money and Propaganda, Money and Society, Money and Banks

ARTWORKS

marble head of Pyrros and laconic red-shaped vessel
01
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
Attic black-figure lykythous of the Theseus Painter depicting Hephaestus holding tongs and glowing myrrh, slaying a Giant
02
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
03
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
Rayed head of Helios, marble
04
Rayed head of Helios (personification of the Sun),
150 – 100 bC, Rhodes, Palace of the Grant Master Photo Paris Tavitian ©Museum of Cycladic Art
05
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
06
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
07
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
08
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
09
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
10
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
11
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
12
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
13
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
14
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
01
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
02
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
03
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
04
Rayed head of Helios (personification of the Sun),
150 – 100 bC, Rhodes, Palace of the Grant Master Photo Paris Tavitian ©Museum of Cycladic Art
05
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
06
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
07
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
08
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
09
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
10
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
11
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
12
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
13
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art
14
Photo Paris Tavitian
©Museum of Cycladic Art

Alpha Bank Numismatic Collection

MORE INFO

The Alpha Bank Numismatic Collection is considered one of the most important collections of coinage worldwide, comprising 11,000 coins from the ancient Greek world. A few extremely rare pieces stand out, representing unique examples of engraved ancient art. The Collection spans from the end of the 7th century BC (the invention of coinage) to the 3rd century AD, when coin production was brought to an end in the cities of the Roman Empire.

The Collection also includes a number of Roman and Byzantine coins. The first aim of the Collection is to highlight how far Greek culture spread during antiquity, as well as its overall influence on the ancient world. To this end, the Numismatic Collection organizes exhibitions and lectures, participates in academic symposiums and international conferences, and produces relevant publications.

CURATED BY
– Professor Dr Nicholas Chr. Stampolidis
Director of the Museum of Cycladic Art
– Yorgos Tassoulas
Archaeologist MPhil., Curator of the Museum of Cycladic Art
– Dr Dimitra Tsangari
Curator of the Alpha Bank Numismatic Collection

IDEA – COORDINATION
– Nicholas Chr. Stampolidis
– Dimitra Tsangari

EXHIBITION CATALOGUE

PURCHASE

The exhibition was accompanied by a Catalogue in Greek and in English which include presents all the works with analytical explanatory texts and copious illustrations.