Golden objects found in this mound and other nearby mounds show an Etruscan influence or were produced on the Italian peninsula and traded.
Museum of Modern Art | Art Deco | Metropolitan Museum of Art | Art Institute of Chicago | San Francisco Museum of Modern Art | National Gallery of Art | Honolulu Museum of Art | Whitney Museum of American Art | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | Art Nouveau | Royal College of Art | Walker Art Center | art | Glasgow School of Art | Museum of Contemporary Art | Philadelphia Museum of Art | Smithsonian American Art Museum | Art Students League of New York | Etruscan | Denver Art Museum | Cleveland Museum of Art | Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles | Art Gallery of New South Wales | Art | Installation art | Gothic art | performance art | Art Garfunkel | Romanesque art | Art Spiegelman |
While in Italy, both Golub and Spero were profoundly influenced by the figurative works of Etruscan and Roman art, whose narratives addressed ancient themes of power and violence.
Otto J. Brendel (born 1901 Nuremberg, Germany; died New York City September 1973) was an art historian and scholar of Etruscan art and archaeology.