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The palmette is a motif in decorative art which, in its most characteristic expression, resembles the fan-shaped leaves of a . It has a far-reaching history, originating in with a subsequent development through the art of most of , often in forms that bear relatively little resemblance to the original. In and uses it is also known as the anthemion (from the ανθέμιον, a flower). It is found in most artistic media, but especially as an architectural ornament, whether carved or painted, and painted on ceramics. It is very often a component of the design of a or border. The complex evolution of the palmette was first traced by in his of 1893. The half-palmette, bisected vertically, is also a very common motif, found in many mutated and vestigial forms, and especially important in the development of plant-based scroll ornament.


Description
The essence of the palmette is a symmetrical group of spreading "fronds" that spread out from a single base, normally widening as they go out, before ending at a rounded or fairly blunt pointed tip. There may be a central frond that is larger than the rest. The number of fronds is variable, but typically between five and about fifteen.

In the repeated border design commonly referred to as anthemion the palm fronds more closely resemble petals of the , as if designed to attract fertilizing insects. Some compare the shape to an open hand – explaining the commonality and derivation of the 'palm' of the hand.

In some forms of the motif the volutes or scrolls resemble a pair of eyes, like those on the harmika of the Tibetan or Nepalese and the eyes and sun-disk at the crown of Egyptian stelae.

In some variants the features of a more fully developed face become discernible in the palmette itself, while in certain architectural uses, usually at the head of or , the fan of palm-fronds and the volutes sometimes appear as breasts. Common to all these forms is the pair of volutes at the base of the fan – constituting the defining characteristics of the palmette.


Evolution
It is thought that the palmette originated in ancient Egypt 2,500 years BC,E.H. Gombrich, The Sense of Order, A study in the psychology of decorative art, PHAIDON second edition, London 1984 page 181 and has influenced Greek art. Egyptian palmettes (Greek anthemia) were originally based on features of various flowers, including the and the lotus or representing lower and upper Egypt and their fertile union, before it became associated with the palm tree. From earliest times there was a strong association with the sun and it is probably an early form of the halo.

Among the oldest forms of the palmette in ancient Egypt was a 'rosette' or daisy-like lotus flower emerging from a 'V' of foliage or petals resembling the akhet hieroglyph depicting the setting or rising sun at the point where it touches the two mountains of the horizon – 'dying', being 'reborn' and giving life to the earth. A second form, apparently evolved from this, is a more fully developed palmette similar to the forms found in Ancient Greece.

Third is a version consisting of a clump of lotus or papyrus blooms on tall stems, with a drooping bud or flower on either side, arising from a (primal) swamp. The lotus and papyrus clump occur in association with Hapi, the god of the crucial life-giving annual Nile inundation, who binds their stems together around an offering table in the sema-tawi motif – itself echoing the shapes of the 'akhet' of the horizon. This unification scene appeared on the base of the throne of several kings, who were thought of as preserving the union of the two lands of (upper and lower, but also physical and spiritual) Egypt and thereby mastering the forces of renewal. These 'binding' scenes, and the heliotropic swamp plants appearing in them, evoked the necessity of discerning and revealing the underlying harmony, the origin of all manifest forms, that re-connects the dispersed and separate-seeming fragments of everyday experience. The further implication is that it is from this apparently occult and magical, undivided source that fertility and new life spring.

Another variant of this motif is a single lotus bloom between two upright buds, a favourite fragrant offering. The god of fragrance, , is represented by such a lotus, or is shown bearing a lotus as his crown. The lotus in Nefertem's head dress typically incorporates twin 'menats' or necklace counterpoises (commonly said to represent fertility) hanging down from the base of the flower on either side of the stem, recalling the symmetrically drooping pair of stems in the lotus and papyrus clumps mentioned above. When depicted on Egyptian tomb walls and in formalized garden scenes, date palms are invariably shown in a similar stylistic convention with a cluster of dates hanging down on either side below the crown in this same position. The link between these hanging clusters and the volutes of the palmette is visually clear, but remains inexplicit. Rising and setting sun and opening and closing lotus are linked by the legend to day and night, life and death and the nightly ordeal of the setting sun to be swallowed by night-sky goddess Nut, to pass through the ("underworld") and be born anew each morning. The plants depicted with this solar fan of fronds or petals and 'supported' by pairs of pendant blooms, buds or fruit clusters all seem especially to emulate and share in the sun's sacrificial cycle of death and rebirth and to point to the lessons it holds for mankind. It seems likely that the underlying model for all these fertile shapes, echoed by the curling cows-horn wig and sistrum-volutes of maternity-goddess , was the womb, with the twin egg-clusters of its . When the sun is reborn in the morning it is said to be born from the womb of Nut. The stylized palmette-forms of the lotus and papyrus showing the solar rosette or daisy-wheel emerging from the volutes of the calyx are similar magical enactments of the 'akhet' – this sacred moment of enhanced creation, the act of transcending or surpassing one's mortal form and 'going forth by day' as an akh or higher, winged, shining, all-encompassing and all-seeing form of life.

Most early Egyptian forms of the motif appear later in Crete, Mesopotamia, Assyria and Ancient Persia, including the daisy-wheel-style lotus and bud border. In the form of the palmette that appears most frequently on Greek pottery, often interspersed with scenes of heroic deeds, the same motif is bound within a leaf-shaped or lotus-bud shaped outer line. The outer line can be seen to have evolved from an alternating frieze of stylized lotus and palmette. This anticipates the form it often took – from Renaissance sculpture through to Baroque fountains – of the inside of a half scallop shell, in which the palm fronds have become the fan of the shell and the scrolls remain at the convergence of the fan. Here the shape was associated with Venus or Neptune and was typically flanked by a pair of dolphins or became a vehicle drawn by sea-horses. Later, this circular or oval outer line became a motif in itself, forming an open C-shape with the two in-growing scrolls at its tips. Much and furniture, stucco ornament or wrought-iron work of gates and balconies is made up of ever-varying combinations these C-scrolls, either on their own, back to back, or in support of full palmettes.

File:Aker or ruti and the akhet.jpg|The hieroglyph akhet of the horizon guarded by the twin lions of Aker File:Egypt.ColossiMemnon.02.jpg|Hapi, god of the Nile inundation: by making offerings and ensuring that Upper and Lower Egypt remain unified, the Pharaoh helps to guarantee that the annual flood of the Nile will recur


Classical architecture
As an ornamental motif found in classical architecture, the palmette and anthemion take many and varied forms. Typically, the upper part of the motif consists of five or more leaves or petals fanning rhythmically upwards from a single triangular or lozenge-shaped source at the base. In some instances hang down on either side above the base and below the lowest leaves. The lower part consists of a symmetrical pair of elegant 'S' scrolls or curling out sideways and downwards from the base of the leaves. The upper part recalls the thrusting growth of leaves and flowers, while the volutes of the lower part seem to suggest both contributing fertile energies and resulting fruits. It is often present on the necking of the capital of columns; however in column capitals of the it takes the shape of a 'fleuron' or flower resting against the abacus (top-most slab) of the capital and springing out from a pair of volutes which, in some versions, give rise to the elaborate and acanthus ornament of the capital.


Botanical combinations
According to Boardman, although lotus friezes or palmette friezes were known in centuries before, the unnatural combination of various botanical elements which have no relationship in the wild, such as the palmette, the and sometimes rosette flowers, is a purely Greek innovation, which was then adopted on a very broad geographical scale throughout the Hellenistic world.


Hellenistic "Flame palmettes"
From the 5th century, palmettes tended to have sharply splaying leaves. From the 4th century however, the end of the leaves tend to turn in, forming what is called the "flame palmette" design. This is the design that was adopted in architecture and became very popular on a wide geographical scale. This is the design that was adopted by in the 3rd century BC for some of its sculptural friezes, such as on the abaci of the Pillars of Ashoka, or the central design of the Pataliputra capital, probably through the or Hellenistic cities such as ."Reflections on The origins of Indian Stone Architecture", John Boardman, p. 16 [1]


Usage
In classical architecture the motif had specific uses, including:
  1. the fronts of ,
  2. ,
  3. the upper portion of the stele or vertical tombstones,
  4. the of the and its continuation as a decorative frieze on the walls of the same, and
  5. the of a .


Variants and related motifs
The palmette is related to a range of motifs in differing cultures and periods. In palmette motifs existed both as a form of flower and as a stylized tree, often referred to as a Tree of life. Other examples from ancient Egypt are the alternating lotus flower and bud border designs, the winged disk of with its pair of serpents, the Eye of Horus and curve-topped commemorative . In later Assyrian versions of the Tree of Life, the feathered falcon wings of the Egyptian winged disk have become associated with the of the palm tree. Similar lotus flower and bud borders, closely associated with palmettes and rosettes, also appeared in Mesopotamia. There appears to be an equivalence between the horns of horned creatures, the wings of winged beings including , and and both the fan and the volutes of the palmette; there is also an underlying 'V' shape in each of these forms that parallels the association of the palm itself with victory, energy and optimism.

An image of Nike, winged goddess of victory, from an vase of the 6th century BC (see gallery), shows how the sacrificial offering alluded to by the voluted altar and flame, the wings of the goddess and the victory being celebrated, all resonate with the same multiple underlying associations carried within the component forms of the palmette motif. Similar forms are found in the hovering winged disc and sacred trees of Mesopotamia, the wand of , the ubiquitous scrolled scallop shells in the canopy of the Renaissance sculptural niche, originating in Greek and Roman sarcophagi, echoed above theatrical arches and on the doors, windows, wrought iron gates and balconies of palaces and grand houses; the shell-like over the door in Georgian and similar urban architecture, the gul and boteh motifs of and textiles, the of Neptune/Poseidon, both the trident and of , the lotus-petal-shaped of the Thai inner-temple, Vishnu's mount, Garuda, the vajra , diamond mace or jewel-in-the- of Tibet and South-East Asia, the symmetrically scrolled cloud and bat motifs and the similarly scrolled ruyi or ju-i scepter and lingzhi or fungus of longevity of the Chinese tradition. Both as a form of the lotus rising from the swamps to touch the sun and as a (palm) tree reaching from earth to heaven, the palmette carries the characteristics of the or world tree. The , which became a potent and enigmatic emblem of the divine right of kings, said to have been bestowed on early French kings by an angel, evolved in Egypt and Mesopotamia as a variant of the palmette.

Similarly, from the early 13th century to 1806 the divine right of the Holy Roman Emperors was conferred by investiture in the , which included the coronation mantle displaying the twin lions (recalling the twin lions of Aker above) guarding the palm in the form of a tree of life, with its two pendant clusters of fruit.

Even everyday garden gates throughout Western suburbia are topped with almost identical pairs of scrolls seemingly derived from the motifs associated with the akhet and the palmette, including the related and sun disk flanked with a pair of eyes. Churchyard gates, tombs and gravestones bear the motif over and again in different forms.

The anthemion is also the mint mark of the Mint of Greece, and it shows in all Greek euro coins destined for circulation, as well as in all Greek collectors' coins.


Gallery

File:Pithos Kamares-Stil 02.jpg|Minoan palmette on a vessel, 1700-1650 BC, ceramic, Archaeological Museum of Heraklion, , Greece

File:Ceiling Pattern, Tomb of Qenamun MET DT10887.jpg|Ancient Egyptian palmettes on a ceiling pattern from the Tomb of Qenamun, illustrated by N. de Garis Davies, 1479–1400 BC, originally fresco, tempera on paper illustration, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

File:Detail of a relief with Ashurnasirpal II, favorite of the gods, 9th century BC, alabaster, from Kalhu aka Nimrud (Iraq), purchase 1855, VA 950, Pergamon Museum (03).jpg|Assyrian palmette on a relief with , 9th century BC, , ,

File:Carved ivory from Nimrud (Kalhu), horse frontlet showing god Bes, 9th to 7th century BCE. From Nimrud, Iraq. Iraq Museum.jpg|Assyrian palmette on a , 9th-7th centuries BC, ivory, ,

File:Carved ivory panel showing 2 mythical winged creatures. From Nimrud, Iraq. Iraq Museum.jpg|Assyrian palmettes of different types on a carved ivory piece from Nimrud, 9th-7th centuries BC, ivory, Iraq Museum

Bricks with a palmette motif MET hb48 98 20a c.jpg|Black-and-white photo with Achaemenid glazed ceramic bricks with a palmette, –4th century BC, glazed ceramic, Metropolitan Museum of Art

File:Painted terracotta from temple of Apollo, 550 BC, AM Corinth, Korm426.jpg|Ancient Greek palmettes on a fragment from the Temple of Apollo in , Greece, 550 BC, painted terracotta, Archaeological Museum of Ancient Corinth

File:Bowl MET DP119630.jpg| palmettes (one seen frontal and the others seen from profile) on an offering tray, 550-500 BC, Bucchero, Metropolitan Museum of Art

File:Achaemenid gold rhyton in the shape of a lion, from Ecbatana, ca. 550-330 BC, Exhibition- 'Iran, Cradle of Civilizations', Archaeological Museum of Alicante (MARQ), Spain.jpg|Achaemenid palmettes in a on a , 550-330 BC, gold, National Museum of Iran,

File:Exekias, anfora con achille e aiace che giocano a dai, castore e polluce, da vulci, 540-30 ac ca. 04.JPG|Ancient Greek palmettes on the Achilles and Ajax playing dice amphora, by , 550-525 BC, pottery,

Terracotta antefix (roof tile) MET DP207966.jpg|Etruscan antefix of a female figure with palmettes, 520-510 BC, terracotta, Metropolitan Museum of Art

(2025). 9780500519592, Thames & Hudson.

Hektor arming Staatliche Antikensammlungen 2307.jpg|Ancient Greek band of palmettes on a vessel, , potter, Staatliche Antikensammlungen, , Germany

File:Theseus Helene Staatliche Antikensammlungen 2309 n2.jpg|Ancient Greek bands of palmettes (a horizontal one and a vertical one) on a vessel, , pottery, Staatliche Antikensammlungen

Kleophrades Painter ARV 189 78bis mission to Achilles.jpg|Ancient Greek band of palmettes and scrolls on a vessel, -470 BC, pottery, Staatliche Antikensammlungen

File:Terracotta mug in the form of a woman's head MET SF061021205.jpg|Ancient Greek frieze of big palmettes at the top of a mug in the form of a woman's head, 500–490 BC, tarracotta, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Detail Erechtheum Acropolis Athens.jpg|Ancient Greek detail of an of the , Athens, 421–405 BC, unknown architect

Manner of the Meidias Painter ARV 1328 97 woman and Eros.jpg|Ancient Greek pyxis with lid, by the , 420-400 BC, pottery,

File:Grave stele of Stephanos (National Archaeological Museum of Athens, 4-3-2018).jpg|Ancient Greek palmette decorated with a pair of , at the top of the of , first quarter of the 4th century BC, marble, National Archaeological Museum, Athens

File:Etruscan antefix with head of Silen and anthemien nimbus, 4th century BC, from Cerveteri, Italy, ceramic, Antikensammlung TC 6681.2d, in the Neues Museum, Berlin (01).jpg|Etruscan palmettes on an with a mascaron of , 4th century BC, ceramic, , Berlin

File:Anthemion of a grave stele (4th cent. B.C.), Archaeological Museum of Piraeus (19 April 2018).jpg|Ancient Greek palmette of a grave stele, mid-4th century, marble, Archaeological Museum of Piraeus, , Greece

Marble akroterion MET DT259543.jpg|Ancient Greek decorated with a double palmette, –325 BC, marble, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Ionic capital Erechtheum, Acropolis, Athens, Greece.jpg|Ancient Greek capital of an Ionic column of the Erechtheum, with a band of palmettes under it

Didyma 2013-03-25q.jpg|Ancient Greek relief with palmettes from the ruins of the Temple of Apollo at , , unknown architect or sculptor, 300-150 BC

File:Lefkadia The Tomb of the Palmettes – V (37306799396).jpg|Ancient Greek palmette of the Tomb of the Palmettes, Mieza, Greece, first half of the 3rd century BC

File:Chapiteau ionique en marbre, antéfixe et cymaises en marbre et en terre cuite, découverts à Athènes. Page of L’Architecture Polychrome chez les Grecs, published in 1851.webp|Ancient Greek polychrome palmettes, illustrated by Jacques Ignace Hittorff, 1830 (published in 1851)

File:Inlay, palmette MET LC-26 7 1218 EGDP023333 (cropped).jpg|Ptolemaic inlay with two palmettes, 100 BC–100 AD, glass, Metropolitan Museum of Art

File:Column Capital MET vs11.154.4a.jpg|Ancient Egyptian palmettes on a capital, 41–68 AD, sandstone, Metropolitan Museum of Art

File:Chapiteau Syrie VIII IX albâtre gypseux 06958.jpg|Islamic palmettes on a capital, 750-800, carved gypsum alabaster,

File:P1200898 Paris IV rue Charles-V n12 rwk.jpg|Baroque mascaron with a palmette above it, on the façade of the Hôtel d'Aubray ( no. 12), Paris, unknown architect, 17th century

File:Grilles fontaine Amphitrite.jpg| palmette (right under the crown) of the grilles from , Nancy, by , 1755

file:KarthauseBuxheimAnnakapelle07.JPG|Rococo palmettes (four, between to the ) on the ceiling of St. Anne's Chapel, Buxheim Charterhouse, , Germany, by Dominikus Zimmermann, 18th century

File:Nightstand, pair with OA 11743 - Louvre (01).jpg| palmettes on a nightstand, from the bedroom of Madame Récamier, by Georges II Jacob and François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter, before 1799, mahogany, ebony, copper, gilt bronze mounts and white marble,

Detail of the Panthéon in Paris (07).jpg|Neoclassical metal palmette on a table in the Panthéon, Paris, unknown architect, 18th or 19th centuries

File:Jacos-Desmalter, Pliant de la salle du Trône de Saint-Cloud (1804).jpg|Neoclassical palmettes on a stool, by François-Honoré-Georges Jacob-Desmalter, 1804, carved and gilded wood, and Beauvais tapestry, in a temporary exhibition called Art and Court Life in the Imperial Palace at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts,

Paris - Palais du Louvre - PA00085992 - 1494.jpg|Neoclassical wrought iron detail of a door of the , with , two palmettes and a N for , unknown architect, 1810

File:Border (France), 1815–25 (CH 18319363).jpg|Neoclassical palmettes on a border, 1815-1825, block-printed and flocked on handmade paper, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York City

29 Rue de Cléry, Paris (01).jpg|Neoclassical grille of door of Rue de Cléry no. 29, Paris, unknown architect, 1850

File:Bucharest relief (7329527034).jpg|Neoclassical palmettes on the ( no. 129), , , unknown architect, 1871

File:Martial75-20150929111748.jpg|Baroque Revival palmette, very similar to those from the Louis XIV style, of a wrought railing in the Château Burrus (Rue Maurice Burrus no. 74) Sainte-Croix-aux-Mines, France, by and , 1900

File:13 Strada Temișana, Bucharest (04).jpg|Beaux-Arts palmettes and cartouche on Strada Temișana no. 13, Bucharest, unknown architect, 1900

Paris Metro 5 Gare d'Austerlitz Detail.JPG|Beaux-Arts ceramic palmettes in the Gare d'Austerlitz of the Paris Métro, unknown architect, designed most probably around 1900, but the metro station was inaugurated in 1931

File:1 Strada Constantin Mille, Bucharest (12).jpg|Beaux-Arts palmette in Palatul Cercului Militar Național (Bulevardul Regina Elisabeta no. 20), Bucharest, by Dimitrie Maimarolu, 1911-1923

File:195 Bwy F sun jeh.jpg|Neoclassical palmettes of 195 Broadway, New York, by William W. Bosworth, 1912-1922

File:Grave of the Vlahuți-Slătineanu Family in the Bellu Cemetery in Bucharest, Romania (12).jpg|Romanian Revival palmette on the dome of the Vlahuți-Slătineanu Grave in the , , by , 1913

File:15-17 Strada Jules Michelet, Bucharest (32).jpg| palmettes in Strada Jules Michelet no. 15-17, Bucharest, by Victor Ștefănescu, 1920

File:58 Strada Ion Brezoianu, Bucharest (02).jpg|Art Deco palmettes at Strada Ion Brezoianu no. 58, Bucharest, by George Damian, 1930

File:Art Deco South Beach - Architectural detail, Miami Beach.jpg|Highly-stylized Art Deco palmette on the Congress Hotel (Ocean Drive no. 1036), Miami Beach, , US, by , 1936


See also
  • Blue Egyptian Water Lily
  • Tomb of the Palmettes
  • Indo-Corinthian capital
  • Pataliputra capital


Notes
  • , Chinese Ornament: The Lotus and the Dragon; , British Museum Pubns Ltd, 1984
  • , . Grundlegungen zu einer Geschichte der Ornamentik. Berlin 1893
  • Helene J. Kantor, Plant Ornament in the Ancient Near East, Revised: 11 August 1999, Copyright 1999 Oriental Institute, University of Chicago
  • Idris Parry, Speak Silence, , Carcanet Press Ltd., 1988
  • Gombrich, Symbolic Images: Studies in the Art of the Renaissance, London, Phaidon, 1972
  • Ernst H. Gombrich, The Sense of Order, A Study in the Psychology of Decorative Art, Phaidon, 1985


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