A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS
A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS
A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS
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A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS
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THE DEVOTED CLASSICIST: THE PRIVATE COLLECTION OF A NEW YORK ANTIQUARIAN
A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS

LATE CLASSICAL TO EARLY HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA LATE 4TH-EARLY 3RD CENTURY B.C.

Details
A GREEK MARBLE HEAD OF A GODDESS
LATE CLASSICAL TO EARLY HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA LATE 4TH-EARLY 3RD CENTURY B.C.
7 1/4 in. (18.4 cm.) high
Provenance
Private Collection, New York.
Antiquities, Sotheby's, New York, 12 June 1989, lot 126.
Acquired by the current owner from the above.

Brought to you by

Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

With her spade-shaped forehead, dreamy visage and full bow-shaped lips, this head recalls the example in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, colloquially known as "The Maiden from Chios," due to the location of its purported discovery (see M.B. Comstock and C.C. Vermeule, Sculpture in Stone, p. 40, no. 56). Both heads were carved for insertion into a separately-made statue. Like the Boston head, this example conveys "the aspects of remote yet human ideal beauty, of a slightly mystic sort, imparted by this remainder" of a complete statue (op. cit.).

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