




The lion ridden by the little god, the lyre playing, the regal stride of the beast — the story of strength yielding to music finds in the AURA ring a material in keeping with its message. Every detail of the intaglio — the lion's muscles, Cupid's wings, the strings of the lyre — is sharply defined, the gilded bronze bezel surrounding it. The plexiglass beneath the bezel brings into the jewel the same lightness that Cupid brings to the myth — the scene's paradox amplifies: strength has already been overcome, the material underlines it. This model with its cameo is decidedly material — high contrasts, clean edges; the base has no sharp angles, smooth, hand-finished, weightless; the bezel's rounded frame catches the gold and throws light onto the cameo; the intaglio is carved so deeply it almost overflows — the message is emphatic. It is the accord between shank and intaglio that ignites the scene.
The round bezel distributes light evenly around the composition. The jewel sits light on the hand, the plexiglass shank fitting the finger naturally. The GTc signature is engraved on the bezel.
On transparent the composition gives a sense of dense suspension — white brings every figure into full light, like a freshly carved frieze; blue is the enveloping sky, the music that calms; porphyry is dense and rooted in time, eternal Rome; light green makes the lion seem to walk through fresh grass wet with dew. On black the composition emerges from the dark backdrop with graphic force — every muscle, every line lifting with clean contrast: white brings the jewel to its sharpest version; blue recalls the deep sky; porphyry returns the scene to the ancient world; light green the most unexpected — nature breaking into myth. On ivory, with its always-different veining, white is almost monochrome, few shadows; blue classic and Mediterranean; porphyry receives the light and the two natural tones enhance each other; light green elegant and easeful.
The music has already won — on the finger, proof that tenderness is stronger than fury.
Important Notes
The jewels' colors in the photo may look different from the original one. This depends from the resolution. Each object is handmade and has unique characteristics.True strength moves through love.
Cupid riding a lion . The lion, a symbol of strength in this carving, is depicted with Cupid who rides him, an allegorical image that represents courage and strength. Cupid, god of love and physical desire is represented as a winged young man who with his arrows makes mortals and immortals fall in love. From an ancient carving. Mosaico pavimentale romano sec. III dC - Römisch-Germanisches Museum di Colonia
Show all products

















