•
Julius Caesar • The Julius Caesar
tazza (bowl and figurine, but with replaced decorated base) is held by the
Museo Lázaro Galdiano, Madrid. It was exhibited as part of the collection assembled by
José Lázaro Galdiano in New York, and exhibited at the
Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga (
National Museum of Ancient Art) in Lisbon in 1945. •
Augustus • The bowl of the Augustus
tazza (with original fluted base, and associated with the figurine of Nero) was sold at Christie's in 2000 for just over £1m and is now in the collection of
Selim Zilkha. Previously, since at least 1913, it was in the
Wernher Collection at
Luton Hoo, possibly acquired from the Frankfurt art dealer
Jakob Goldschmidt. • The Augustus figurine (associated with the bowl of the Domitian
tazza) is now held by the
Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Previously (per Hayward 1970) they were in the collection of
Standish Vereker, 7th Viscount Gort. •
Tiberius • The bowl of the Tiberius
tazza (with original fluted base, and now associated with the figurine of Domitian) is the
Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The
tazza was donated to the Victoria and Albert Museum by
Walter Leo Hildburgh in 1956, after being displayed on loan there since 1937. The bowl was traditionally thought to show Domitian but has recently been re-identified as Tiberius; it is now associated with the figurine of Domitian, but until 1956 with the figurine of Vitellius. The Vitellius figurine was removed in 1956 and transferred as part of a three-way swap: the figurine of Vitellius was sent to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; the Metropolitan Museum sent its figurine of Otho to the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, and the figurine of Domitian from Toronto was sent to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The attempt to correct the mismatches reunited the Vitellius and Otho bowls in New York and Toronto with the correct figurines, and was intended to reunite Domitian too, but inadvertently created a new mismatch in London. • The Tiberius figurine (associated with the bowl of the Nero
tazza) is held in a private collection, on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. •
Caligula • The bowl of the Caligula
tazza (with original fluted base, and associated with the figurine of Galba) is at the
Casa-Museu Medeiros e Almeida in Lisbon. • The Caligula figurine (associated with the bowl of the Galba
tazza) is in the
Bruno Schroder collection in the United Kingdom. The mismatched
tazza was sold at Christie's, London in June 1960. •
Claudius • The Claudius
tazza (bowl and figurine, with original fluted base) is held in a private collection, on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. •
Nero • The bowl of the Nero
tazza (with original fluted base, associated with the figurine of Tiberius) is in a private collection, on loan to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. • The figurine of Nero (associated with the bowl of the Augustus
tazza) is now in the collection of
Selim Zilkha (see above). • The Galba figurine (associated with the Caligula bowl) is held by the
Casa-Museu Medeiros e Almeida in Lisbon.--> •
Vitellius • The Vitellius
tazza (bowl and figurine, but with replaced decorated base) is held by the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (previously with the figurine of Otho, send to the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto in 1956). It was owned by Dr.
Walter Leo Hildburgh, and then
Jules S. Bache, until 1944, and was acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art using the Fletcher Fund in 1945. •
Vespasian • The Vespasian
tazza (bowl and figurine, but with replaced decorated base) are in the private
Al Thani collection in London. It was exhibited at
Burlington House in 1901, acquired by
J. Pierpont Morgan, sold at Christie's in New York in October 1982, and then sold again at Sotheby's in New York in February 2013 for $1.4m. •
Titus • The bowl of the Titus
tazza is in the
Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga, Lisbon. The complete
tazza was previously owned by
Bertram Ashburnham, 4th Earl of Ashburnham, but was sold without the base or the emperor figurine – described as a
rosewater dish by Cellini – at the
Ashburnham sale at Christie's in March 1914. The bowl was sold again at Christie's in 1935, by
William Randolph Hearst from his collection at
St. Donat's Castle. The original base and figurine are now lost. • There is a 19th century replica of the bowl of the Titus
tazza (with replaced decorated base, and associated with a copy of the Julius Caesar figurine). It was in the
Wernher Collection at
Luton Hoo before 1913 and sold at Sotheby in 2000. •
Domitian • The bowl of the Domitian
tazza (with a replica of its original fluted base, and associated with the figurine of Augustus) is held by the Minneapolis Institute of Art. • The Domitian figurine is held by the Victoria and Albert Museum, associated with a bowl (with replaced decorated base) previously thought to be part of the Domitian
tazza, but now thought to show Tiberius. The figurine was sent to London from Toronto in the 1950s." File:Tazza with the figure of Emperor Vitellius, and bowl depicting scenes from his life MET DP320636.jpg File:Tazza with the figure of Emperor Vitellius, and bowl depicting scenes from his life MET DP324302.jpg File:Tazza with the figure of Emperor Vitellius, and bowl depicting scenes from his life MET DP323987.jpg File:Tazza with the figure of Emperor Vitellius, and bowl depicting scenes from his life MET DP323990.jpg File:Vitellius tazza MET DP327063.jpg ==References==