The deities belong to two different religious traditions, attesting to the fusion of Roman and Gallic practices of worship in
Switzerland in the Roman era: Jupiter, Juno and Minerva, the
Capitoline Triad, are Roman gods, as is the Lar, while Artio and Naria are romanized Celtic goddesses of regional significance. The matching style of the five main statues (Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Naria and the human Artio) indicates that they were made by the same bronze caster, probably in the late second century AD somewhere in western Switzerland. The Lare appears to have been made in Italy in the first century AD.
Elements The dominating element of the group is the she-bear, Artio in her animal form, long. The taut, muscular body and open mouth convey the great animal's tense attention, and the structure of her fur is realistically suggested by carefully engraved lines. The bear is accompanied by a bronze tree, highly stylized and botanically indeterminable. The human Artio was originally seated on a
throne that is now lost. She wears a sleeved dress, a heavy mantle over her left shoulder, and a diadem in her wrapped hair. A high basket filled with fruit and grain, on a slender pillar, hides the wreath of fruits in her lap and the sacrificial bowl in her right hand from view. This, and also the lack of any accoutrements associated with a bear goddess, suggests that this figure was originally conceived as a solitary representation of a goddess of vegetation or agriculture, which was later repurposed – together with the bear – as a representation of Artio. The pedestal bears the inscription, :
Deae ArtioniLicinia Sabinilla that is, "To the Goddess Artio, from Licinia Sabinilla." About the sponsor of the group nothing is known but her name, which is Italic in origin but was also widely used in
Gaul. The discovery of several soldering joints on the pedestal by
Paul Vionnet in 1899 confirmed that the bear had indeed been affixed to the pedestal, and allowed a reconstruction of what are now believed to be the two configurations in which the bronze elements were originally displayed. It appears that Artio's bear form was initially alone on the left side of the pedestal, facing the tree at the right end, while an unknown object was placed on the semicircular protrusion on the left side of the pedestal. At some later time, the tree was moved to that protrusion behind the bear, making room for the newly added statue of the human Artio, her basket and her now missing throne. This was probably done at the behest of the statue's sponsor, Licinia Sabinilla, and the pedestal also probably received its inscription at that time, because it is unlikely that the bear alone would have been titulated as
Dea Artio. The bronzes have since been displayed in this final position.
Measurements The Artio group (Inv. no. 16170/16210) weighs . The pedestal is long and the tree is high. The body of the bear, the pedestal, and the human body up to the shoulders are hollow. ==Notes==