No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A GRAECO-ROMAN ARCHAISTIC MARBLE HERM HEAD OF THE HERMES PROPYLAIOS

CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C., AFTER A GREEK ORIGINAL OF CIRCA 430-420 B.C.

Details
A GRAECO-ROMAN ARCHAISTIC MARBLE HERM HEAD OF THE HERMES PROPYLAIOS
CIRCA 1ST CENTURY B.C., AFTER A GREEK ORIGINAL OF CIRCA 430-420 B.C.
The god with archaic style beard and hair, the hair arranged in three rows of tight curls over the brow, wearing a fillet, eyes recessed for inlay with remains of inlay in right eye, mounted
8 in. (20.5 cm.) high
Provenance
Formerly in a French private collection; given to the present owner in the early 1980s.
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. Please note that the lots of Iranian origin are subject to U.S. trade restrictions which currently prohibit the import into the United States. Similar restrictions may apply in other countries.
Further details
END OF SALE

... atque solitudinem faciunt bonum eventum appellant.
(after Tacitus, Agricola, 30.6)

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Lot Essay

In Ancient Greece, the God Hermes was a phallic god associated with fertility, luck, roads and borders; he was also known as the messenger of the Gods, and later as the patron of markets and merchants, travellers and athletes. His name is thought to derive from the Greek word herma, a boundary stone or pillar of square rectangular form topped by the head of Hermes, and with ithyphallic male genitals further down on the pillar. These herms were placed at strategic points along roadsides and crossroads, marking boundaries, and also placed outside houses, gymnasia and in markets, in order to ensure the fertility of herds and flocks, and to bring luck.

The example we have here is a copy of a famous sculpture, the Hermes Propylaios (Hermes Before-the-Gates) which stood at the entrance to the Acropolis at Athens. The original, by the renowned Athenian sculptor, Alcamanes, in the second half of the 5th Century B.C., is known to us from literary descriptions, and from later copies. Cf. A. Stewart, Greek Sculpture, Yale, 1990, pp. 267-8, pl. 400, for similar.

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