Praxiteles:
Statue "The Youth of Marathon" (reduction)
Praxiteles:
Statue "The Youth of Marathon" (reduction)

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replica | bonded bronze + stone | handmade | patinated | reduction | total height 68 cm | weight approx. 12 kg

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Product no. IN-348417

Delivery time: approx. 2 weeks

Statue "The Youth of Marathon" (reduction)
Praxiteles: Statue "The Youth of Marathon" (reduction)

Detailed description

Statue "The Youth of Marathon" (reduction)

The Athenian Praxiteles is considered the most important sculptor of the Late Classical period, alongside Scopas and Lysippos. The artist coated his statues with a veil of calm thoughtfulness that strangely enraptures the figures, while the viewer enters the sphere of action of the work of art precisely as a witness to this seclusion. The originals of his works have been lost and would have been irretrievably lost if the ancient Romans had not made replicas of them. Then, however, a unique find shocked the world: Greek fishermen recovered from the sea near Marathon a statue of a youth of incomparable beauty, which is undoubtedly the work of Praxiteles.
Original: Athens National Archaeological Museum. Praxiteles, Attic, c. 330 BC.

Reduction. Hand-patinated cast with natural stone base. Height incl. pedestal 68 cm. Weight approx. 12 kg.

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About Praxiteles

Praxiteles (c. 395 BC to c. 320 BC) was a Greek sculptor in Athens in the 4th century. He is praised by Pliny for his art of carving marble. However, his works in bronze are also known. Contrary to today's idea that the noble effect of marble is only caused by the white stone, Praxiteles had his sculptures painted by the painter Nikias. Through written records, in which his works are described, over fifty works are known to us today. These sculptures would be lost if the Romans had not made replicas.

Praxiteles' subjects were the gods of Olympus, whom he depicted as eternally youthful. In addition, portrait and funerary statues testify to the popularity of the Attic sculptor among his contemporaries.

His most famous statue and, according to Pliny, the most beautiful "in the whole world" is the "Aphrodite of Cnidus". Fifty large-scale Roman replicas of the beautiful woman undressing for her bath have been preserved. In addition to other images of Aphrodite, Praxiteles also created Eros statues, whose nudity gave rise to numerous scandalous anecdotes. One of his most famous statues of youth is the "Apollo Sauroktonos", which has been preserved in twenty Roman replicas. The most successful of these can be admired in the Louvre in Paris and the Vatican.

The sculptor always succeeded in lending grace to his statues by means of a beautifully curved contour. Especially in his images of the gods, he attached more importance to a differentiated depiction of the soul's feelings than to the reproduction of the sublime character typical of the time, thus giving them a human appearance.

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