Hermes and the Infant Dionysus ,''
Archaeological Museum of Olympia This statue was discovered in 1877, in
Olympia, Greece, by a team of German archeologists led by
Ernst Curtius. It was discovered in the
Temple of Hera, which the Greek writer
Pausanias had visited in the
2nd century CE. Because Pausanias recorded the presence of a statue of Hermes and Dionysus in this temple, which he attributed to Praxiteles, scholars have identified it with this one. Debate has been ongoing, however, over whether it actually is one of his works. In 1911, the
Encyclopædia Britannica noted that : "Our knowledge of Praxiteles has received a great addition, and has been placed on a satisfactory basis, by the discovery at
Olympia in 1877 of his statue of
Hermes with the Infant Dionysus, a statue which has become famous throughout the world. [...] the figure of the Hermes, full and solid without being fleshy, at once strong and active, is a masterpiece, and the play of surface is astonishing. In the head we have a remarkably rounded and intelligent shape, and the face expresses the perfection of health and enjoyment. This statue must for the future be our best evidence for the style of Praxiteles. It altogether confirms and interprets the statements as to Praxiteles made by
Pliny and other ancient critics." Later opinions have varied, reaching a low with the sculptor
Aristide Maillol, who railed, "It's
kitsch, it's frightful, it's sculpted in
Marseille soap". In 1948, Carl Blümel published it in a monograph as
The Hermes of a
Praxiteles, reversing his earlier (1927) opinion that it was a Roman copy, finding it not 4th century either, but referring it instead to a
Hellenistic sculptor, a younger Praxiteles of Pergamon. The sculpture was located where
Pausanias had seen it in the late 2nd century AD.
Hermes is represented in the act of carrying the child
Dionysus to the
nymphs who were charged with his rearing. The uplifted right arm is missing, but the possibility that the god holds out to the child a
bunch of grapes to excite his desire would reduce the subject to a genre figure, Waldstein (1882) noted that Hermes looks past the child, "the clearest and most manifest outward sign of inward dreaming". The statue is today exhibited at the
Archaeological Museum of Olympia. Opposing arguments have been made that the statue is a copy by a Roman copyist, perhaps of a work by Praxiteles that the Romans had purloined. Wallace (1940) suggested a 2nd-century date and a
Pergamene origin on the basis of the sandal type. Other assertions have been attempted by scholars to prove the origins of the statue on the basis of the unfinished back, the appearance of the drapery, and the technique used with the drilling of the hair; however scholars cannot conclusively use any of these arguments to their advantage because exceptions exist in both Roman and Greek sculpture.
Apollo Sauroktonos Other works that appear to be copies of Praxiteles' sculpture express the same gracefulness in repose and indefinable charm as the
Hermes and the Infant Dionysus. Among the most notable of these are the
Apollo Sauroktonos, or the lizard-slayer, which portrays a youth leaning against a tree and idly striking with an arrow at a lizard. Several Roman copies from the 1st century are known including those at the
Louvre Museum, the
Vatican Museums, and the
National Museums Liverpool. On June 22, 2004, the
Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA), announced the acquisition of an
ancient bronze sculpture of
Apollo Sauroktonos. The work is alleged to be the only near-complete original work by Praxiteles, though the dating and attribution of the sculpture will continue to be studied. The work was to be included in the 2007 Praxiteles exhibition organized by the Louvre Museum in Paris, but pressure from
Greece, which disputes the work's provenance and legal ownership, caused the French to exclude it from the show.
Apollo Lykeios The
Apollo Lykeios or Lycian Apollo, another Apollo-type reclining on a tree, is usually attributed to Praxiteles. It shows the god resting on a support (a tree trunk or tripod), his right arm touching the top of his head, and his hair fixed in braids on the top of a head in a haircut typical of childhood. It is called "Lycian" not after
Lycia itself, but after its identification with a lost work described by
Lucian as being on show in the
Lykeion, one of the
gymnasia of
Athens.
Capitoline Satyr The
Resting Satyr of the
Capitol at
Rome has commonly been regarded as a copy of one of the Satyrs of Praxiteles, but it cannot be identified in the list of his works. Moreover, the style is hard and poor; a far superior replica exists in a torso in the
Louvre. The attitude and character of the work are certainly of Praxitelean school.
Leto, Apollo, and Artemis Excavations at
Mantineia in
Arcadia have brought to light the base of a group of
Leto,
Apollo, and
Artemis by Praxiteles. This base was doubtless not the work of the great sculptor himself, but of one of his assistants. Nevertheless, it is pleasing and historically valuable.
Pausanias (viii. 9, I) thus describes the base, "on the base which supports the statues there are sculptured the
Muses and
Marsyas playing the flutes (
auloi)." Three slabs which have survived represent Apollo; Marsyas; a slave, and six of the
Muses, the slab which held the other three having disappeared.
Leconfield Head The
Leconfield Head (a head of the Aphrodite of Cnidus type, included in the 2007 exhibition at the Louvre) in the Red Room,
Petworth House,
West Sussex, UK, was claimed by
Adolf Furtwängler to be an actual work of Praxiteles, based on its style and its intrinsic quality. The Leconfield Head, the keystone of the Greek antiquities at Petworth was probably bought from
Gavin Hamilton in Rome in 1755.
Aberdeen Head in gallery 20 at the British Museum The
Aberdeen Head, whether of
Hermes or of a youthful
Heracles, in the
British Museum, is linked to Praxiteles by its striking resemblance to the
Hermes of Olympia. Dated between 325-280 BC, the statue, of which only the head is extant, would have been crowned with a metal wreath in his hair, for which the dowel holes survive.
Aphrodite of Cnidus ''
Aphrodite of Cnidus was Praxiteles's most famous statue. It was the first time in Greek art that a full-scale female figure was
portrayed nude. It was bought by the people of
Cnidus, and according to Pliny valued so highly by them that they refused to sell it to
King Nicomedes in exchange for discharging the city's enormous debt. Many copies survive, the
Colonna Venus in the
Vatican Museums often having been considered the most faithful to the original. Its renown was such, that it was immortalised in a lyric epigram:
Artemis of Antikyra According to
Pausanias there was a statue of Artemis made by Praxiteles in her temple in
Anticyra of Phokis. The appearance of the statue, which represented the goddess with a torch and an arch in her hands and a dog at her feet, is known from a 2nd-century BC bronze coin of the city. A recently discovered dedicatory inscription of the 3rd-2nd century identifies the goddess at Antikya as Artemis
Eleithyia.
Uncertain attributions Vitruvius (vii, . 13) lists Praxiteles as an artist on the
Mausoleum of Maussollos and
Strabo (xiv, 23, 51) attributes to him the whole sculpted decoration of the
Temple of Artemis at
Ephesus. These mentions are widely considered as dubious.
Roman copies Besides these works, associated with Praxiteles by reference to notices in ancient writers, there are numerous copies from the Roman age, statues of Hermes, Dionysus, Aphrodite, Satyrs and Nymphs, and the like, in which a varied expression of Praxitelean style may be discerned. Roman - Satyr Pouring Wine - Walters 2322.jpg|
Satyr Pouring Wine, Roman copy after Praxiteles (–360 BC),
Walters Art Museum,
Baltimore Dionysos chez Icarios - Musée du Louvre AGER Ma 1606 ; MR 719 ; N 1375.jpg|
Icarus is visited by a drunken Dionysos and his entourage, Roman copy, 175–200, Louvre, Paris ==See also==