Hermes/Mercury is depicted as a naked young man, with his signature
petasos and
talaria. Standing forth on his right leg, his right hand produces a purse, while a
chlamys is draped over his left shoulder. A
caduceus was likely once present on the figure but it is no longer present. Mercury, discovered in 1882, acquired by the MET in 1906. The purse, or money pouch indicates fortune, and would be venerated in a household shrine. A similar statue in the MET (06.1057) was discovered in 1882 in
Versailleux,
France, depicting Mercury in a similar manner. , based on the Greek original by
Polykleitos The god is posed in a balanced and casual position, the
contrapposto, indicative of many other statuettes manufactured at the time in the 2nd century. They were modelled on the
Greek originals like made by
Polykleitos, such as that of the
Hermes Criophorus, now at the
National Archaeological Museum, Athens. ==References==