2016-11-09
Two Roman statuary after Greek originals. The first one is a young hero to possibly a godly representation; originally believed to be a statue of Meleager, Roman copy of a 4th-century BC Greek original after Skopas, Greek (active mid 4th century BCE).
The second example being a Torso of a Dancing Faun, 1st century BC. The faun is the Roman equivalent of the Greek satyr or god Pan. This remnant of a marble faun may be a Roman copy of an earlier Greek, part of a group known as “The Invitation to Dance.”
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