A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT

CIRCA MID 2ND CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
Circa Mid 2nd Century A.D.
From the right front corner of a sarcophagus, sculpted in high relief, preserving a figure of Apollo, depicted nude but for a mantle pinned on his right shoulder and draped over his left shoulder and right leg, his hair center-parted and arranged in a top-knot, holding his kithara in his left hand, resting it on his raised left knee, his foot on a rocky outcrop, a bird below, with a winged griffin between his legs, its head turned back, preserving part of an oak tree along the upper edge, and the right foot from a draped figure on the bottom left, the short end of the sarcophagus with a feline paw in shallow relief
23 in. (58.4 cm) high
Provenance
Professor Benjamin Rowland, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Lot Essay

This fragment is likely from a sarcophagus depicting the myth of Apollo and the satyr Marsyas. The subject was popular in Greek and Roman art and appears on Roman sarcophagi "early in their development, and continues in frequent use through the first half of the third century" A.D. (McCann, Roman Sarcophagi in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, p. 81). For a complete example in the Galleria Doria Pamphili see no. 92 in McCann, op. cit.

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