A WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF MINERVA GIUSTINIANI, after the antique, the helmeted figure with flowing classical robes, her right hand raised and a serpent to her feet, on a rectangalar shaped base (her right hand missing from the wrist, her left small finger lost, the serpents head lost), 19th century

Details
A WHITE MARBLE FIGURE OF MINERVA GIUSTINIANI, after the antique, the helmeted figure with flowing classical robes, her right hand raised and a serpent to her feet, on a rectangalar shaped base (her right hand missing from the wrist, her left small finger lost, the serpents head lost), 19th century
32in. (81.5cm.) high

Lot Essay

The Minerva Giustiniani is first recorded in a set of engravings of the Giustiniani collection published in 1631. In 1805 it was bought by Lucien Bonaparte, who moved it to his collection at the recently acquired Palazzo Nunez. In 1817 it was sold by him to Pope Pius VII who had commissioned a new extension of the Vatican Museum, the Braccio Nuovo, where it remains today.

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