Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Marble statue of the Diadoumenos (youth tying a fillet around his head)

View through The Met
Marble, Imperial, Roman
Greek and Roman Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY, Gift of Mrs. Frederick F. Thompson 1903
image-zoom
Title: Marble statue of the Diadoumenos (youth tying a fillet around his head)
Description:
Marble, Imperial, Roman.

Related Results

Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Theseus and Poseidon; Musician and Audience
Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Theseus and Poseidon; Musician and Audience
On one side: the Athenian hero Theseus visits his divine father Poseidon. Theseus’s mother was Aethra, and ancient sources sometimes consider him to be the son of her husband, Aege...
THe Farnese Diadoumenos, Athlete binding victor's fillet around his head
THe Farnese Diadoumenos, Athlete binding victor's fillet around his head
Copy in plaster made before 1887, transferred from the Royal Academy of Art in 1896, made on a Roman copy form the 1st. Cent. BCE of a lost Greek original made around 440 BCE, betw...
Head from a Statue of Ur-Ningirsu, Ruler of Lagash
Head from a Statue of Ur-Ningirsu, Ruler of Lagash
This stone statue, broken off below the neck, represents a man’s head. The eyes are almond-shaped and have thick lids. The eyebrows are also very thick, and meet on the bridge of t...
[Molduras decorativas] [Material gráfico]
[Molduras decorativas] [Material gráfico]
Manuscript inscriptions with pen and black ink, on top of each of the moldings: “Ready it or fillet/Tondillo or junquillo with its fillet/Top Bull of a base of a pilastra/Lower Bul...
Tirthankara Suparsvanatha in Kayotsarga, or Standing Meditation, Posture and Protected by a Five-Headed Naga
Tirthankara Suparsvanatha in Kayotsarga, or Standing Meditation, Posture and Protected by a Five-Headed Naga
Formerly thought to represent Parsvanatha, Jainism’s twenty-third Tirthankara, this sculpture has now been identified as Suparsvanatha, Jainism’s seventh Tirthankara. According to ...
Bearded Head of a Votary
Bearded Head of a Votary
This statue head, broken off at the neck, represents a bearded man wearing a conical hat. The eyes, indicated by shallow raised relief, are wide and flat. The wide nose is poorly p...

Back to Top