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nikonf2s: Just A Matter Of Scale. Greco/Roman Marble Statues. Lady Lever Art Gallery, Wirral April 2015. Nikon D300 17-55 f2.8G Shot at 17mm f2.8 1/50th sec
ancientpeoples: Statue of an Acrobat on a Crocodile 1st Century BC - 1st Century AD Roman (Source: The British Museum)
elwicho: Bronze statue of Antinous, favorite and lover of the Roman emperor Hadrian. He was deified after his death, being worshiped in both the Greek East and Latin West.
ancientart: Statue of Minerva. Roman artwork of the Imperial era. 2nd century AD, made of white marble. Courtesy & currently located at the Naples National Archaeological Museum. Photo taken by Marie-Lan Nguyen
ancientart: Detail of Statue of Eirene, Greek goddess of Peace. Roman copy of a famous greece bronze figure by Cephisodotus (the elder), which is lost. Eirene is carrying Plutus, the god of plenty. Currently located at the Glyptothek Museum in Munich,
ancientart: Roman Fragments of a marble statue of the Diadoumenos, AD 69-96, Marble, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
ancientart: The so-called Roman “Braschi Antinous”, also known (wrongly) as Albani Antinous. The statue is composed of an antique head of Antinous and a antique body of Heracles. Marble, Italy. Courtesy & currently located at the Louvre, France. Phot
humansofcolor: prokopetz: sarahtypeswords: wetorturedsomefolks: memejacker: several-talking-corpses: memejacker: caligula had anime eyes wait romans painted their marble sculptures it looks like a cheap theme park ride mascot yep here’s a statue
salomi:Venus d'ArlesThe Venus of Arles, discovered in several pieces in the Roman theatre at Arles. The statue dates to the end of the 1st century BCE after a Greek original c. 365 BC by famous Praxiteles.- Louvre Museum, Paris.
babinus: The Venus Kallipygos in the National Archaeological Museum in Naples, a late 1st century BC Roman marble statue, thought to be a copy of a Greek bronze from around 300 BC.
ancientart: Hera Farnese. Statue of Hera (of the Ephesus-Vienna type), the wife and one of three sisters of Zeus, and the goddess of women and marriage. Roman copy of the Imperial era after a Greek Classical original. 1st century AD, the original dates
rrriordan: Love this statue of Diane. And her Uggs are very fashionable. thegetty: Hair up, boots on. She’s ready for some action. Who is she? Diana, the Roman goddess of the hunt. What was in her hand originally? There’s some debate. A mirror
hismarmorealcalm: Statue of a member of the imperial family shown in heroic semi–nudity Early Imperial, Augustan or Julio–Claudian 27 B.C. – 68 A.D. Roman Marble, pigment, gilding
ancientpeoples: Bronze statue of the satyr Marsyas, portrayed making the fateful decision to pick up and play the pipes discarded by the goddess Athena. Roman 50 BC- 50 AD Source: British Museum
error888: On July 1, 1893, at the excavation of Delphi near the Temple of Apollo, archaeologists uncovered a near-perfectly preserved, still-upright statue of Antinous, the lover of the Roman Emperor Hadrian. [510 × 704] : HistoryPorn wow
via-appia: Statue known as the Diadoumenos. Marble figure of an athlete tying a victor’s ribbon around his head. After an original in bronze by the sculptor Polykleitos. Roman, 118 - 138 AD
hadrian6: The Albani lion. 1st-century Roman green basalt lion statue with a yellow marble sphere under one paw, in the Albani Collection in the Denon Wing of the Louvre. Paris. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
hellas-inhabitants: The building of the Viennese Parliament in Greco-Roman style with the statues of Athena Pallas and a horse tamer in front of it. To κτίριο του Βιεννέζικου Κοινοβουλίου σε ελληνορωμαϊκό
komeotobo: Marble Statue Group of the Three Graces Imperial Roman 2nd century A.D
thragedy:Pantheon is derived from the Ancient Greek “Pantheion” (Πάνθειον) meaning “of, relating to, or common to all the gods” Cassius Dio, a Roman senator who wrote in Greek, speculated that the name comes either from the statues
mythologyofthepoetandthemuse: Sitting Dionysus from Neo-Attic Relief - marble statue, circa c. AD, from Roman period, Museum of Naples.
mythologyofthepoetandthemuse:Winged Nike or Victory of Brescia, a bronze statue from 3rd-century-BC Greece, reworked in the 1st century AD during the Roman Imperial period. The Hellenic original portrayed Venus, looking at her reflection on Ares’s
prokopetz: sarahtypeswords: wetorturedsomefolks: memejacker: several-talking-corpses: memejacker: caligula had anime eyes wait romans painted their marble sculptures it looks like a cheap theme park ride mascot yep here’s a statue of Augustus
humansofcolor:prokopetz:sarahtypeswords:wetorturedsomefolks:memejacker:several-talking-corpses:memejacker: caligula had anime eyes wait romans painted their marble sculptures it looks like a cheap theme park ride mascot yep here’s a statue of Augustus
excelsior-praeteritum: Statue of young girl with dove Roman copy of Hellenistic original of the 3rd-2nd century. By mharrsch
philamuseum: Throwback Thursday: “Diana”Before “Diana” was installed at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1932, she was repaired at the Roman Bronze Works (shown here) in Corona, NY. Learn more about the statue’s history and recent conservation
sixpenceee: Statue of Saint Bartholomew, who was skinned-alive by the Romans for not renouncing his christian-faith. In this statue, the sculptor depicts Bartholomew with muscles, bones, and veins for all to see. Draped around his shoulders and waist
humansofcolor:prokopetz:sarahtypeswords:wetorturedsomefolks:memejacker: several-talking-corpses: memejacker: caligula had anime eyes wait romans painted their marble sculptures it looks like a cheap theme park ride mascot yep here’s a statue of
thoodleoo: thoodleoo: there’s a lot of fascinating stuff in ancient art but nothing will be as funny to me as that time the romans went through their anime phase where some of the statues had really big eyes like tell me that’s not kawaii as fuck
hadrian6: Statue of Nereide on Seahorse. Roman 1st.century. copy after Hellenistic original at Uffizi Gallery. Florence, Italy. http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
caesaringaul: Roman Marble Head of an Athlete, Based Upon a Greek Bronze Statue, Antonine, ca. 138-192 C.E. This head of a youth wearing a fillet must have belonged to the statue of a victorious athlete. He probably rested one arm lightly on his
avgustaoktavia: The eye of a marble statue from Herculaneum, with surviving paint. Roman before 79 AD.
ancientpeoples: Marble Statue Group of the Three Graces, 1.23 m high (48″) Imperial Roman, 2nd century A.D. These young girls, linked in a dance-like pose, represent The Three Graces: Aglaia (Beauty), Euphrosyne (Mirth), and Thalia (Abundance).
ganymedesrocks: Marble statue of a youth (1 century A.D.) Roman copy-adaptation of a Greek statue believed to date back to the late 5th century B.C
ganymedesrocks: A 1st century CE Roman copy of a 5th century BCE Statue of an Ephebe (Young Man) Greek original, found in the Augustus Felix surbanus, Pompeii, Italy bronze with silver cladding and glass paste eyes
ganymedesrocks: ancientpeoples: Bronze statue of a boy 132.4cm high (52 1/8 inch.) Roman Period, Augustan, 30 BC - 14 AD. Source: Metropolitan Museum The privilege of establishing a public portrait in Republican Rome was based primarily on social
boysnmenart: Statue of Meleager. Roman copy of a 4th-century BC Greek original. Early to Middle Imperial period. Etruria Parian marble
boysnmenart: Marble statue of the so-called Stephanos Youth. Period: Early Imperial. Date: late 1st century B.C. or 1st century A.D. Culture: Roman.
boysnmenart: Portrait statue of a boy, Late 1st century B.C.–early 1st century A.D.; Julio-Claudian Roman Bronze
boysnmenart: The Ares Borghese is a Roman marble statue of the imperial era, 1st or 2nd century AD. This statue possibly preserves some features of an original work in bronze, now lost, of the 5th century BC by Alcamenes, an Athenian sculptor, or
boysnmenart: Dancing Satyr, bronze statue - circa 1st c. BCE, Roman period
apollophile: pointfocussnap: A statue to the Roman Emperor Constantine the Great at the approximate spot in York, England, where he was proclaimed emperor in the year 306. He was the first Christian emperor of Rome. ☼Images of masculinity, nobility,
retro-gay: Statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton - Lovers and tyrannicides who helped establish democracy in Athens.Roman copies of Greek originals
seducingeros: Detail of bronze statue of Hercules Gilded bronze. 2nd century B.C. Roman, based on Greek models from the 4th century B.C. Height: 2.41 m (7 ft. 10 ¾ in.). Found in the Forum Boarium, Rome, 15th century. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Capitoline
via-appia: Marble statue of Aphrodite, the Venus Genetrix, copy of Greek bronze statue attributed to Kallimachos (late 5th century B.C.) Roman, 1st–2nd century A.D.
didoofcarthage: Bronze statue of an aristocratic boy. Roman, Augustan Period, 27 B.C. to A.D. 14. Metropolitan Museum of Art.From the Met:This life-sized statue was found on the eastern Mediterranean island of Rhodes, whose ancient Greek cities were
ganymedesrocks: The Ares Borghese is a Roman marble statue of the imperial era (1st or 2nd century AD). It is identifiable as Ares by the helmet and by the ankle ring given to him by his lover Aphrodite. This statue possibly preserves some features
mythologer: Bronze statue of an aristocratic boy (Source: The MET) This life-sized statue was found on the eastern Mediterranean island of Rhodes, whose ancient Greek cities were wealthy, flourishing centers ofcommerce and culture under the Romans.
hadrian6:Ares God of War. Roman marble statue of (Ares) Mars The Roman god of war and lover of goddess Aphrodite. 1st - 2nd Century AD. Louvre Museum, Paris http://hadrian6.tumblr.com
antonio-m:The head of the famous Vatican statue of Antinous, beloved of the Roman Emperor Hadrian. Here as Dionysus or Bacchus with grape wreaths. Originally in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK and transferred to Rome in 1884. Roman sculpture, early
greek-museums:(Thessaloniki) Museum of the Roman Forum: From the temporary exhibition “…young and in excellent health”, Aspects of youths’ life in ancient Macedonia. Statue of Dionysus, god of theater, grapes and wine. (Roman period)
4men-who-like-it-hot: great photo of the legs of a Roman life-size bronze statue of a male youth, found in Aventicum, modern-day Avenches, Switzerland. They probably belonged to the statue of an athlete.
bohemea: suicideblonde:reblololo: Statue of Aphrodite or a Roman lady Roman Imperial Period about mid-1st century A.D. (via MFA Boston) contrapposto (the understanding that the human body stands at rest with most of its weight on one foot so that
aclockworkfetish:salomi:Statue of Aphrodite1st or 2nd century A.D. Roman. Copy of a Greek statue of the 3rd or 2nd century B.C.The goddess of love is shown as though surprised at her bath. Originally, her arms reached forward to shield her breasts and
salomi:Ares BorgheseThe Ares Borghese is a Roman marble statue of the imperial era (1st or 2nd century AD). It is identifiable as Ares by the helmet and by the ankle ring given to him by his lover Aphrodite. This statue possibly preserves some features