CQ1 Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 English Edition Editorial This encourages us to orchestrate the Cahn Kunstraum with other projects by contem- porary artists, probably about twice a year. An exhibition with the German Paris-based artist Katinka Bock is currently being planned. We will also continue our con- temporary art projects in Paris. The extent to which the exhibition space on Steinen- torstrasse lends itself to archaeological ex- hibitions will soon become clear when we present the Christian and Hedy Schmass- mann Collection of Ancient Silver there this spring. We discussed this collection in Cahn's Quarterly 4/2020 and it gives me great pleasure to be carrying out this pro- ject with the collector personally. In view of the ongoing pandemic and the starkly different environment in which we find ourselves today, we are also in the pro- cess of repositioning ourselves. We will lim- it our attendance of fairs to the large ones, TEFAF Maastricht and Frieze Masters Lon- don, and maybe some small, local events. Furthermore, we aim to visit our clients more frequently and are also expanding our digital availability. Among other things, we are planning a live chat on our website, where you can ask us questions about ob- jects or other topics, as well as a weekly live stream on Instagram, where you can discuss the objects that you are interested in with either me or the archaeologist Dr. Lilly Ston- er and view them in front of the camera. We will inform you by e-mail when these new features go live. Of course, you are very wel- come to visit the gallery in Basel in person, too. Whatever channel you choose, we look forward to seeing you! Dear readers To try out new things, to be inspired by other people, to share crazy ideas and to put them into practice – these are some of the most rewarding aspects of the art trade, even if they require a lot of hard work and com- mitment from the whole team. All these fac- tors came together last autumn when Cahn Kunstraum on Steinentorstrasse in Basel opened its doors with a large retrospective of the French artist Laura Lamiel. A series of photographs by Serge Hasenböhler and an illuminating text by the art historian Manon Burg can be found on pp. 4-7 of this is- sue. The project, carried out in collaboration with Parisian gallery Marcelle Alix during Art Basel, was a success and attracted a very good audience. Representatives of the Centre Pompidou and the Fondation Pinault as well as of numerous German and Swiss institutions visited the exhibition and ex- pressed great interest in the artist's work. Various prominent artists also found their way to Steinentorstrasse. I was particularly pleased that the room was fully accepted and valued for its authentic- ity. The industrial space, marked by decades of use, surprised visitors of the exhibition with its monumentality and its diverse types of light: daylight, warm and cold light as well as "light domes" entered into a live- ly dialogue with the works of art, far more than would have been possible with a clini- cal white cube aesthetic. For her installation Chant d'amour, Laura Lamiel chose a dark, eerie room in the basement, which contrib- uted significantly to the powerful impres- sion made by this work. Laura Lamiel, drawing from Intimate Territories, 2020- 2021. India ink, pen, red lipstick, and graphite on paper, 42 × 29.7 cm Visit us in Maastricht www.tefaf.com/fairs/tefaf-maastrichtCQ Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 2 Discovered for You Healing “Iron” On the Use of Surgical Instruments in Antiquity In the Archaic Period, the pre-Socratics fur- thered the development of medicine as a tech- né or science with their studies on nature and human life. A generation later, doctors like Hippocrates began researching the causes of diseases and their symptoms, epidemics, and therapeutic and prognostic methods. In the 4th century B.C., Aristotle comprehend- ed the close connection between anatomy and physiology. Empirical anatomical studies and dissections were first conducted in the Hellenistic Period and Roman medical practi- tioners such as Celsus and Galenos continued research in this field. The medical knowledge of Antiquity was influential throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, and its im- pact continues to be felt in modern times. The Corpus Hippocraticum included advice on various surgical methods, including the repositioning of joints, the splinting of frac- tures, the treatment of head injuries (includ- ing trepanation, a method in which a hole is made in the skull) or embryotomy (remov- al of the fetus from the uterus to save the mother’s life when normal delivery is not possible). Apart from the use of opium, little was known about anaesthetics. Greek medi- cal knowledge was passed on to the doctors in Rome and the procedures employed by surgeons became increasingly complex and sophisticated. New surgical techniques were developed, such as the operation of abscess- es and blood vessels, the removal of urinary stones and the treatment of cataracts. “Those diseases that medicines do not cure are cured by the iron. Those that the iron does not cure are cured by fire. Those that fire does not cure must be considered incur- able.” (Corpus Hippocraticum, Aphorisms 7.87). This excerpt from a collection of med- ical texts composed in the 5th-3rd centuries B.C. and compiled in Alexandria in the 3rd century B.C. describes the remarkably clear- cut course of action taken by doctors in An- tiquity. “Iron” refers to surgical instruments that were mostly made of bronze, whilst "fire" stands for the technique of cauterisa- tion using a heated piece of metal. If neither procedure helped, the doctor should modestly acknowledge the limitations of his art. There is evidence for the medical treatment of illnesses or traumata from the Neolithic Period onwards. For instance, traces of sur- gical interventions on human bones have been found. Nonetheless, people initially considered both illness and recovery to be God-given. In the event of illness, Greeks would mostly turn to Asclepius, the god of healing, for help. His sons, Machaon and Podalirius, who fought on the side of the Greeks, acted as doctors during the Trojan War (Homer, Iliad, 2.731 f., 11.833). In a re- markably knowledgeable manner, Homer describes how wounds were inflicted, what their effects on the body were and how they were treated: occasionally with a cauterising iron, but mostly with medication and band- ages (Homer, Iliad, 4.204 ff.). With regard to surgical instruments, the trea- tise On the Physician recommended that they should be “well fitted for their use in size, weight, and fineness.” (Corpus Hippocraticum, Περὶ ἰητροῦ 9.208). Hardly any instruments from ancient Greece have survived, but we know the broad variety of types employed by Roman surgeons all the better. Pompeii pro- vides a snapshot: in the vicinity of the am- phitheatre, a human skeleton was found lying on top of a medical toolbox containing sets of various probes, tweezers, retractors, scalpels with iron blades and a cataract needle. Doctors also used tubes with lids or folding cases to transport their instruments. From Greek times onwards, funerary and votive reliefs might de- pict open tool kits, as for instance in the relief with a doctor in Berlin (2nd century B.C., An- tikensammlung, inv. no. Sk 804). The instru- ments contained in these kits make it possible for those found in large numbers in the tombs of doctors, for instance in Bingen (Germany) and Reims (France), to be compared and iden- tified. A Pompeiian wall painting in the Casa di Sirico (Regio VII, Naples, Museo Nazionale) shows ancient surgery in progress: it depicts the doctor Iapyx using pliers to remove an ar- rowhead from Aeneas' thigh. Smiths crafted the surgical instruments from silver, bronze or zinc-rich brass. In soft tissue surgery, scalpels, scissors, retractors, needles and cauterising irons were employed. Special bladder stone scalpels and roughened hooks served to remove stones, and cataract needles were used to treat cataracts. Bone surgeons used saws, chisels, bone lifters, pliers, drills and scrapers. For trepanation a trephine drill was employed – such an instrument was included in the grave goods of the doctor buried in Bin- gen. It is tubular in shape with a guide pin in the interior and a round saw at one end that was made to rotate using a kind of fiddle bow. The Cahn Gallery is currently offering a selec- tion of two other typical instrument types used in soft tissue surgery: a variety of probes and a pair of tweezers (fig. 1). They functioned as the “extended fingers of the doctor” (A. Krug, Heilkunst und Heilkult. Medizin in der Antike, Munich2 1993, 93). The probes were often dou- ble-ended, a principle still used today (fig. 2). Using the oval end of the probe (probe button), the doctor could gain an “insight" into natural Fig. 1: A GROUP OF ANCIENT SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS. From top to bottom: two spoon probes, four ear probes alter- nating with two instrument handles; a pair of tweezers. L. 9.3–19.1 cm. Bronze. Roman, 1st–2nd cent A.D. CHF 1,600 By Gerburg LudwigCQ Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 3 Fig. 2: Modern surgical instruments, some double-ended. From left to right: a button probe, a series of sharp spoons; below: a pair of ciliary forceps. © Drawing: R-E-A-L, Wiki- media Commons (site visited 21.9.2021) © Photo: Zephyris, Wikimedia Commons (site visited 1.10.2021) My Choice body orifices and assess the depth of wounds and abscess cavities. It could also serve as a lever during operations. The Greek surgeon Antyllus described the following procedure: “... after we ... have placed a probe button below the (blood) vessel and lifted it, we will pass a needle with a double spun thread along the probe button so that it is positioned underneath the artery...” ( On Vasodilation in: Oribasi- us, Coll. med. rel. XLV 24). The other end of the probe varied in shape and use. The sharp edges of the spoon probe were used to remove plaque from wounds or bony cavities. Today, these “sharp spoons” are used to treat wounds on both outpatients and patients undergoing surgery in hospital (fig. 2). The more delicate ear probes with round spoons and pointed han- dle ends were used to clean ears, small wounds, and fistulas, to remove bladder stones or to treat haemorrhoids. Their modern equivalent is the ear curette used in ENT medicine. By means of comparison, two instrument handles can be identified as another spoon probe and as an ear or spatula probe. The pair of tweezers with their distinctive inward-bent tips belong to the cate- gory of smooth tweezers. They were used by doctors to remove ingrown eyelashes and for- eign bodies or to grasp soft tissue, for instance in tonsil and uvula operations or during sur- gical haemorrhoid treatment. Their modern equivalent are the ciliary forceps used by oph- thalmologists to remove eyelashes (fig. 2); in microelectronics, wafer tweezers are used to handle semiconductors. Thus, not only the or- igins of medical research, but also the roots of the design and practical use of today’s surgical instruments lie in Greek and Roman Antiquity. HEAD OF A BOY. H. 21.1 cm. Marble. Greek, Late Classical, 1st half of 4th cent. B.C. Price on request By Jean-David Cahn A Head of a Boy I am fascinated by this life-size head of a boy, who must be two to four years old, because of its very subtle combination of individual features with a degree of idealiza- tion. The little boy's face expresses a seriousness found only in children. The melancholy gaze from under sleepy, heavy lids and the slightly sceptical smile combine to form a facial expression replete with premonition: the boy seems to be aware that he has to go, that he must cross the threshold into the afterlife. The head is practically in- tact, with only a few mi- nor in-fills. The tang be- low the chin reveals that the head was designed to be inserted into a statue that may have formed part of a funerary mon- ument. The back of the head is particularly volu- minous, perhaps indicat- ing that the boy’s head was tilted forwards so that he looked diagonal- ly downwards. The hair is of a particularly high quality, showing the typical Late Classical hair tufts, subdivid- ed by incisions, to advantage. A few stray curls at the nape of the neck make for a charming detail. The lively surface created by the curly tufts is strongly reminiscent of metalwork. Our sculpture is undoubtedly a Greek origi- nal of the Late Classical Period (first half of the 4th century B.C.), something that is very rarely found on the art market. The clearest pointers for such a date of creation are the sculpture’s precise formal language and also the immediacy of its emotional expression – the poignant melancholy of parting that provokes a visceral response in the beholder. In late 5th and early 4th century B.C. Ath- ens, the representation of emotions in sculp- ture reached an acme not to be surpassed in later times due to the large numbers of first- class sculptors drawn to the city by such major building projects as the Parthenon. In the wake of these civic building activities, a wealth of tombstones of the highest quality was sculpted. Our exquisite head may be sit- uated in this context. Imprint Publisher Jean-David Cahn Malzgasse 23 CH-4052 Basel www.cahn.ch ISSN 2624-6368 Editors Jean-David Cahn Yvonne Yiu Authors Manon Burg Jean-David Cahn Ulrike Haase Gerburg Ludwig Translations Yvonne Yiu Photos Niklaus Bürgin Ulrike Haase Serge Hasenböhler Design and Layout Michael Joos Yvonne YiuCQ Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 4 Cahn Kunstraum Laura Lamiel's Exhibition Honey on a Knife A Journey to Other Realities excavation. In the four other installations – I’ve Seen Water Buffalo (2019-2021), Intimate Territories (2020-2021), Honey on a Knife (2021), A Song of Love (2019-2021) – contem- porary artifacts from the artist's collection are combined with those from the past, without hierarchy or distinction. Laura Lamiel speaks of “a shifting of mem- ories from 2020 that intermingle with those of older centuries and vice versa," for which the suitcase constitutes a visual leitmotif throughout the exhibition. These suitcases were often bought at flea markets by the art- ist; some of them may have belonged to im- migrants and would have contained “a shirt and a bar of soap," to use the artist's words. For the exhibition, she filled them with pho- tos of her collection of objects and/or plants and, most strikingly, with Roman glass ves- sels. Receptacles of previous memories, these suitcases constitute a mise en abîme, reiter- ating the principle underlying the exhibition on a microcosmic scale: Laura Lamiel aims to subvert the linear chronological model based on past, present, and future in order to access other realities beyond this physical world. The suitcases thus become the “ferrymen” or “gate-keepers” of this trans-temporal journey orchestrated by the artist. The solo exhibition of French artist Laura Lamiel (born 1948), the first show hosted by Cahn Kunstraum and certainly the largest exhibition of her work ever shown outside France, ended on 20 November 2021. For some it was an opportunity to discover her work, and for those who were already famil- iar with her artistic practice, it was a chance to re-discover it in the light of a selection of archaeological objects made by the artist during a stay at the Cahn Gallery in Basel. For this exhibition, the artist was able to bril- liantly exploit Cahn Kunstraum’s brutalist ar- chitecture, itself a receptacle of different tem- poralities and previous activities, to present five monumental installations, all original in their own way. Immersive installations, red ink drawings, older pieces and new creations: Laura Lamiel's works were transformed by the integration of ancient objects, thus mul- tiplying the affective, poetic and political charge of her work. This encounter with archaeology can be both symbolic or evocative, but is also caught in a fusional relationship. In Untitled (2000-2020) – which revives a minimalist heritage of which she claims to be a part – the artist arranges enamelled metal bars in a quadrilateral man- ner reminiscent of the method of stratigraphic Laura Lamiel, Intimate Territories, 2020-2021. India ink, pen, red lipstick, graphite on paper, copper tables. Each drawing 42 × 29.7 cm By Manon Burg The question of the threshold is indeed central to Laura Lamiel’s work, as can be seen by her frequent use of the mirror to suggest the pas- sage to other realities. Among the hundreds of broken glasses on the ground that constitute Honey on a Knife, a few Roman glasses – trav- ellers through the millennia – seem to be, mi- raculously, the sole survivors of this catastro- phe. Oscillating between a psychoanalytical approach and spiritual cosmology, the mirror inspires access to these plural worlds beyond the material realities. In the same vein, the artist confided in me that in A Song of Love, which is a tribute to Jean Genet's only film, the Roman colossi that adorned her "cell" accentu- ated the gravity of her piece and anchored it. To this I replied: “Despite the sheer physicality of this colossus that weighs almost a ton, our reflection projected into infinity invites us to let ourselves be uprooted from this physical world." Laura Lamiel looks for the gaps, she seeks to create a tension between opposites that is so intense that they meet and become one. This is perhaps one of the greatest forces that can be experienced in her work. When I interviewed the artist in Basel on the eve of the opening in September, she told me that she did not yet know what her encoun- ter with these ancient objects, these cultures from the past, would generate in her work. One thing is certain, Laura Lamiel still has a lot to show us through her eyes. To learn more about the exhibition and the artist's work, an audio interview in French will be available on the Cahn Contemporary website as of March 2022. Page 5 above: Laura Lamiel, I’ve Seen Wa- ter Buffalo, 2019-2021. Tempered glass, paintings fixed under glass, metal frames, fluorescent tubes, books, cactus and plant moss, suitcases, objects from the artist’s collection. Variable dimensions. Page 5 below: Laura Lamiel, Honey on a knife, 2021. Glass, mirror, raw steel chair, fluorescent tubes, objects from the artist’s collection, Roman glass vessels. Variable dimensions. Page 6: Laura Lamiel, A Song of Love, 2019- 2021. Steel, one-way mirrors, copper table, objects from the artist’s collection, raw steel units, fluorescent tubes. 190 × 200 × 160 cm © Photos: Serge HasenböhlerCQ Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 7 New Artworks Monthly on www.cahn.ch Insights into Everyday Life in Antiquity A BLACK-FIGURE SIANA CUP WITH SYMPOSIASTS (ATTRIBUTED TO THE C PAINTER). Dm. 26.3 cm (excluding handles). Clay. A deep cup with broad, everted rim. Formerly with Galerie Arete, Zurich. Thereafter priv. coll. London, acquired Galerie Arete 24 June 1981. Publ.: H.A.G. Brijder, Siana Cups I and Komast Cups, Amsterdam, 1983, p. 245, no. 109 (without illus.). Greek (Attic), ca. 575-560 B.C. Sold A RED-FIGURE CUP, ATTRIBUTED TO THE PAINTER OF LOUVRE G 456. Dm. 28.5 cm. Clay. Formerly Collection Cavadini, Sorengo-Lugano, Switzerland, acquired in the 1960s. Attic, ca. 440 B.C. CHF 24,000 A STATUETTE OF AN ACTOR. H. 13.7 cm. Bronze. Formerly French private collection. Roman, 2nd-3rd cent. A.D. CHF 10,000 A MONUMENTAL LEAF POINT. H. 20 cm. Si- lex. Tool with symmetrical, leaf-shaped form. Formerly priv. coll. Hervé Bouraly, Saint- Ouen, France, between 1965-1974. France, Upper Palaeolithic, Solutrean, ca. 22,000- 17,000 B.C. CHF 4,600 A HAND AXE. H. 17.5 cm. Stone. Symmet- rically worked tool. Formerly coll. Dalomba, France. Inscription on object: “JABLINE. Set M. 1877". France, Middle Palaeolithic, Mous- terian in Acheulean tradition, ca. 120.000- 40.000 B.P. CHF 2,800 A DAGGER BLADE. L. 15.5 cm. Silex. Beige stone with dark veins. Austrian priv. coll., acquired in the 1990s on the art market. Nor- dic area (Scandinavia, North Germany), Final Neolithic to Early Bronze Age, ca. 2200-1000 B.C. CHF 6,800 A DOUBLE SPIRAL ORNAMENT. W. 15.1 cm. Bronze. Double spiral made from a thin bronze rod with a rhomboid cross-section. The outermost coil is decorated with incisions. Joined together in the centre by a round wire spiral. Originally a dress ornament. Green patina. Intact. Formerly Swiss priv. coll. Dr. R. H. (1922-2007). Danubian region, 1st half of Late Bronze Age, ca. 14th-12th cent. B.C. CHF 3,800 A HAND AXE. H. 15.5 cm. Stone (silex). Yellowish-beige stone. Formerly priv. coll. Hervé Bouraly, Saint Ouen, France, between 1965-1990. Inscription on object: “1953. Champley (Yonne)". France, Lower Palaeo- lithic, ca. 800.000-100.000 B.P. CHF 2,800CQ Cahn’s Quarterly 1/2022 8 A TETRADRACHM, SYRACUSE. Dm. 2.3 cm. Silver. Obverse: Charioteer driving a quadriga; Reverse: Head of Arethusa. Inscription: ΣΥΡΑΚΟΣΙΟΝ . Formerly Coll. A. Maly, 1966 from Bank Leu, Zurich. Western Greek, Sicily, Syracuse, ca. 480-475 B.C. (Gelon I and Hieron I) CHF 6,600 NOMOS, TARANTO. Dm. 1.9 cm. Silver. Obverse: Nude horseman galloping towards the right. ΓΥ in field. Reverse: Phalanthos, the mythical founder of Tarentum, nude astride a dolphin. Formerly UBS, Zurich, Auction 56, 2003, lot 22. Magna Graecia, 302-281 B.C. CHF 1,500 A FOLDING KNIFE WITH ANIMAL GROUP. L. 6.1 cm. Bone, iron. Folding knife with a handle in the form of sexually active animals. Formerly South London priv. coll., acquired on the European art market between 1970 and 1980. Roman Provinces, 3rd cent. A.D. CHF 3,600 A LENTOID INTAGLIO WITH THEATRE MASK. H. 1.4 cm. Formerly Herbert A. Cahn, Basel, 1990s. Roman, 1st cent. B.C. CHF 800 AN INTAGLIO WITH HUNTSMAN. H. 1.7 cm. Carnelian. Formerly priv. coll. K., Switzer- land.Roman, 1st cent. A.D. CHF 12,000 A BEAKER WITH TRAILING. H. 8 cm. W. 7.3 cm. Translucent, bluish green glass. On the body a thin spiral thread. Free-blown. For- merly priv. coll. Dr. F.-J. and M. E., Wehr, acquired 1980 on the German art market. Roman, 1st-3rd cent. A.D. CHF 1,600 AN AMPHORISKOS. H. 8.9 cm. W. 7.8 cm. Light blue glass. Two-handled jar with bul- bous body and arched base. Short, wide neck. Free-blown. Formerly Coll. Shlomo Moussaieff, Israel, 1948-2000. Roman, 1st- 3rd cent. A.D. CHF 2,200 A LARGE BOTTLE. H. 24.9 cm. Greenish glass. Formerly priv. coll. H. W.-W. (1901-1979), Switzerland. On the underside two old labels: “Römische Flasche aus Lyoner Privatbesitz" and “Collection ... Paul Bie". Roman, 2nd-3rd cent. A.D. CHF 4,800 A PAIR OF GOLD EARRINGS. L. max. 5 cm. Gold. The outstanding quality of these ear- rings is evident in the filigree intricacy of the gold work. Formerly priv. coll. Southern France, acquired in the 1990s. Eastern Greek, 3rd-1st cent. B.C. CHF 15,000 A PAIR OF GOLD EARRINGS. L. 3.2 cm and 3.4 cm. Gold. "Navicella" type. Formerly Sothebys London, 16 July 1962, lot 86 with illus. Thereafter estate of Dr. Roland Maly (died 2005), Switzerland. Greek, 2nd half of 4th-3rd cent. B.C. CHF 5,600 A RING WITH AN EAGLE INTAGLIO. Dm. 1.3 cm. Gold, carnelian. Roman, 1st-3rd cent. A.D. CHF 3,200 A RING WITH A GARNET. Dm. 1.2 cm. Gold, garnet. Western Greek, Hellenistic, 3rd-1st cent. B.C. CHF 1,200Next >