THE SOURCE OF CLASSICAL MARBLE SCULPTURES IN THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON: AN UPDATE
The provenance of Greek and Roman sculptures is significant to Classical scholars because
in addition to revealing where the raw material for a particular object or fragment was quarried, it
sheds light on economic and artistic aspects of marble use in antiquity. Our approach has
emphasized the identification of the quarry source of as many sculptures as possible using only
minimally destructive techniques. Stable carbon and oxygen isotope analysis is the best single
method for determining marble provenance, but the quarry source can be unequivocally identified
only 25% of the time. When supplemented by petrography and cathodoluminescence, isotopic
overlap may be resolved, but these methods require the removal of a substantial solid sample - which
is just not possible on most museum pieces. Rather, the minimally-destructive isotopic method (1
mg of unweathered marble is sufficient) is preferably combined with x-ray diffraction, grain-size
determination, stylistic analysis, literary information, and archaeological data in order to narrow the
choices among overlapping isotope data fields.
We report here on the analysis of an additional 60 Greek and Roman marble sculptures in
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, to add to the 83 presented at ASMOSIA III. Our results
demonstrate the utility of these complementary methods, and highlight the effectiveness of
integrated, interdisciplinary research efforts. In many instances, initial identifications made by
informed visual inspection were confirmed by the laboratory analyses; in others, the new
identifications have considerable archaeological and art historical significance.
The source of a piece of marble is only the first step toward understanding the circumstances
which transformed that piece into a work of art, an understanding that will only be achieved through
the successful integration of analytical, archaeological, and artistic data on a very large number of
marble sculptures. Our growing database should reflect the overall distribution history of each
marble source, and will eventually permit the study of marble exploitation within specific socio-economic and historical contexts.