Speranza
Marble statue of an athlete.
Period: Imperial
Date: 1st century
A.D.
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble, Pentelic
Dimensions: H.
116.2 cm
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit
Line: Fletcher Fund, 1926
Accession Number: 26.60.2
This artwork is
currently on display in Gallery 162
Roman copy of Greek original. Adaptation of a Greek statue
type of the late
5th century B.C.
The pose of this statue probably
derives from a Classical Greek bronze erected to commemorate the victory of a
young athlete.
With its sinuous grace, it became an appealing decorative work in
this Roman adaptation in marble.
All the statues on view in this central
courtyard are Roman copies or variations on statue types created some four or
five hundred years earlier, during the late Classical or Hellenistic period.
While most of the original works were dedications set up in religious
sanctuaries, the Roman versions were used primarily to decorate the rooms and
gardens of private villas as well as the theaters and public baths that were
important features of every Roman city.
References
Richter, G.
1926. "Recent Accessions of Roman Sculpture." Bulletin of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art 21(11): pp. 255, 257, fig. 2.
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