Skip to main content

Tria l'idioma

Quan les guies no proporcionen traduccions al vostre idioma, normalment les tradueix Google. Tanmateix, algunes guies només estan disponibles en el seu idioma original.

Transcripció

Llegenda

  • Marble statue of a wounded warrior, Marble, Roman

Marble statue of a wounded warrior

#1037

ca. 138–181 CE

Marble

Descripció

Copy of a Greek bronze statue of ca. 460–450 B.C.

The subject of this statue has not been identified with certainty. The warrior held a shield on his left arm and probably a spear in his right hand, and he stands with his feet carefully placed on a sloping surface. The figure must have some association with the sea because a planklike form surrounded by waves is carved on the plinth of a second copy in the British Museum, London. It has been suggested that he is the Greek hero Protesilaos, who ignored an oracle's warning that the first Greek to step on Trojan soil would be the first to die in battle. This statue might represent him descending from the ship ready to meet his fate. Following the discovery of a wound carved in the right armpit, the figure was reinterpreted as a dying warrior falling backward and identified as a famous statue by the sculptor Kresilas. Many other identifications have been suggested to explain the unusual stance and the unique iconography of this statue and of the copy in London, but none has been generally accepted.

1037. Marble statue of a wounded warrior

Gallery 153

INFORMACIÓ ADDICIONAL

Mides
H. 87 in. (220.98 cm)
Crèdit
Frederick C. Hewitt Fund, 1925
Número d'accés
25.116

Llicències de programari