Griffin? Chicken? Dragon?
We are not actually certain, but we sure had fun 3D scanning and printing this object for our good friends over at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art

The final product in the Art Museum’s exhibition: “Flora et Fauna: Nature in Ancient Mediterranean Art and Culture”
“…working with David Israel P’25 in Bowdoin’s Department of Academic Technology & Consulting, and Joseph Hluska, Assistant Preparator at the BCMA, to create the replica cauldron featured in Flora et Fauna. Israel produced 3D scans of Protome in the Form of a Griffin, and from those scans created multiple 3D printed models. To begin the process of the creation of the base of the cauldron, Higginbotham supplied Hluska with examples of Ancient Greek cauldrons and the typical forms that they took. Using a coil building technique, Hluska threw the cauldron in two parts and fired the components in the kiln at the Visual Art Department with the assistance of Jackie Brown, Associate Professor of Visual Art. Hluska then manipulated the 3D printed models with a heat gun to fit the profile of the finalized clay vessel. While the original ancient cauldron would have been larger and made of bronze, the replica cauldron featured in Flora et Fauna offers audiences greater context for how an object like the Protome in the Form of a Griffin may have appeared and functioned in its entirety.”