A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
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A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
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A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT

CIRCA 2ND CENTURY A.D.

Details
A ROMAN MARBLE RELIEF FRAGMENT
CIRCA 2ND CENTURY A.D.
21 5⁄8 in. (54.9 cm.) long
Provenance
Art Market, U.K.
Antiquities, Bonhams, London, 10 June 1997, lot 426.
Art Market, Canada, acquired from the above.
Antiquities, Christie’s, New York, 5 June 1998, lot 290.
Art Market, U.S., acquired from the above.
Private Collection, New York.
Acquired by the current owner from the above, 2022.

Brought to you by

Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

Preserved is the upper right corner of a relief framed within cyma reversa and a plain outer molding. To the right stands a nude Apollo holding a lyre. His head is angled slightly downward and to his right towards his son Asclepius, who is depicted with his upper torso bare, his hands lowered to the drapery bunched on his hips. On his head he wears a thick, rolled diadem, the corona tortilis, above his wavy, center-parted hair (for the type, compare the head in Rome, no. 73 in A. Giuliano, ed., Museo Nazionale Romano, Le Sculture, vol I,1). Further to the left is the head of another deity, probably Mercury, with characteristic curly hair and the remains of a chlamys on the shoulders. The relief was likely once part of a larger composition, perhaps from an altar, depicting the Olympians. For related compositions, see for example a Roman marble circular altar, circa 1st century A.D., the Farnese Puteal in Naples (A. Ruesch, Guida illustrate del Museum nazionale di Napoli, no. 289), and an earlier Hellenistic relief from Histria, Romania.

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