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   USA > New York City > Metropolitan Museum of Art > Greek art at the Sixth through Fourth Century B.C. > Fragments of a marble statue of the Diadoumenos
Fragments of a marble statue of the Diadoumenos

Fragments of a marble statue of the Diadoumenos





Model : Diadoumenos

Date : between 69 and 96

Material : Marble
Acquisition : Fletcher Fund (1925)
Youth tying a fillet around his head
Item 14 on 23
Greek Antiquities
Sculpture

Areas related
Ile de Delos (Greece)
Site related :



Description   

Copy of a Greek bronze statue of ca. 430 B.C. by Polykleitos. Head, arms and legs from kness down, and tree trunk are ancient. Remaindier of figure in a cast taken from a marble copy found at Delos and now in the National Museum, Athens.

This statue represents a youth adorning his head with a fillet (band) after victory in an athletic contest. The original bronze probably stood in a sanctuary such as that at Olympia or Delphi, where games were regularly held. The Greek sculptor Polykleitos of Argos, who worked during the mid-fifth century B.C., was one of the most famous artists of the ancient world. His figures are carefully designed with special attention to bodily proportions and stance. The figure's thorax and pelvis tilt in opposite directions, setting up rhythmic contrasts in the torso that create an impression of organic vitality. The position of the feet - poised between standing and walking - gives a sense of potential movement. This rigorously calculated pose, which is found in almost all works attributed to Polykleitos, became a standard formula used in Graeco-Roman and later Western European art.

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Fragments of a marble statue of the Diadoumenos
Polyclète
Anonyme
Diadoumenos