Head of Athena, 440-420 BC. Creator: Unknown.

Head of Athena, 440-420 BC. Creator: Unknown.

3-044-384 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Head of Athena, 440-420 BC. Additional Info: A marble head is all that survives of this acrolithic statue - a type of sculpture that was assembled from several different materials. The sculptor of this figure carved the parts of the body that represented exposed flesh (head, arms, and feet) from marble, and then attached these to a body made out of another material, probably wood. Acrolithic sculpture was produced most frequently in the Greek colonies in South Italy, where fine white marble had to be imported and was therefore very expensive. This figure’s head is intact with hollow eye sockets and cuttings for the attachment of auxiliary features. The ears are roughly shaped with the lobes drilled for separately made earrings. Cuttings on this head help reconstruct the statue's original appearance. A large hole at the front center on the top surface of the head is for the attachment of a helmet. Six smaller holes drilled around the hairline may have supported locks of hair. The addition of a bronze helmet, a typical attribute of the goddess Athena, would have hidden the fact that the top of the head was cut off. The rectangular cutting over each temple once supported the raised cheekpieces of the helmet.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Unknown, attributed to: :

Medium
  1. Marble

Picture Type
  1. Mythological figure
  2. Object
  3. Sculpture

Category Hierarchy

Religion & Belief Mythology

Society & Culture Art & Literature


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3304x4234
File Size : 40,984kb


Aliases

  1. 82.AA.91
  1. 103VAY
  1. 1200009449
  1. 3-044-384
  1. 3044384
  1. 82.AA.91

Buy a Print  

Keywords - refine your search by combining multiple keywords below.