A LARGE EAST GREEK LIMESTONE SEATED MAN
A LARGE EAST GREEK LIMESTONE SEATED MAN

IONIA, ARCHAIC PERIOD, CIRCA 530-510 B.C.

Details
A LARGE EAST GREEK LIMESTONE SEATED MAN
IONIA, ARCHAIC PERIOD, CIRCA 530-510 B.C.
Lifesized, sculpted in the round, the broad figure enveloped in a floor-length chiton, the heavy garment falling down his legs and gathering in two layers of narrow rounded vertical pleats, rippling along the hems, recessed below for insertion of the now-missing feet, with zigzag drapery cascading down the proper left side, a thick himation worn over, with a vertical seam descending from the V-shaped neckline, with stepped folds at the knees, the fabric gathered at the crooks of his bent arms, seated on a cushioned chair, with modelled legs, preserving some polychromy, including yellow on the chair legs, black on the sides, and red on the garment, each side of the chair with two drilled mortises for attachment of additional (now missing) ornaments
37 in. (94 cm.) high
Provenance
Private Collection, Zurich, circa 1980.
Anonymous sale; Gorny and Mosch, Munich, 27 May 2003, lot 58.

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Lot Essay

Large draped seated statues of this type lined the Sacred Way of the Temple of Apollo at Didyma and were also installed in the sanctuary itself, possibly representing the benefactors who financed the new building project of the 6th century B.C. (see, for example, no. GR 1859.12-26.9, Sculpture B 280 in the British Museum). The use of limestone rather than marble, as well as the stylistic differences in the rendering of the chiton and mantle suggest that the present example may be from a different East Greek sanctuary, such as Samos, Delos or Cyme, where other similar figures were dedicated.
All these figures share a common stylistic anonymity, the result of the body being overwhelmed by the heavy draped garments. Most likely these statues were not meant to be realistic portraits but generic depictions of wealthy individuals and local rulers, all dedicated to Apollo, some identified by inscriptions.

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