Lenormant Athena
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{{short description|Greek statuette of the goddess Athena..}}
File:NAMA 128 Athena Lenormant 1.JPG
The Lenormant Athena is the name given to a small Greek statuette which was made in the first century CE.
Discovery
The Lenormant Athena was discovered in 1859 near the Pnyx hill in Athens and identified by François Lenormant a year later as a small copy of the Athena Parthenos of Phidias. The {{convert|41|cm}} high pentelic marble sculpture has thus come to be known by his name. The unfinished work is of great art historical significance since it not only shows us what Phidias' statue looked like but also the reliefs on her shield and the base on which she stood, which are otherwise only known from literary sources.
Description
Athena stands in a quiet, graceful pose, resting her weight on her right leg. She is dressed in an Attic peplos. Her left arm rests on her shield. An Amazonomachy is depicted on the shield. In her right hand, which rests on a strong support, Athena must have held a Nike, which has not survived. The unfinished base depicts the birth of Pandora. The back is still in an unfinished state as well.
Location
Today the statuette is stored in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens with inventory number 128.
Bibliography
- Nikolaos Kaltsas: Sculpture in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 2002 {{ISBN|0-89236-686-9}}, p. 106.
External links
- {{Commonscat-inline|Athena Lenormant|Lenormant Athena}}
{{Phidias}}
{{National Archaeological Museum of Athens}}
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Category:Archaeological discoveries in Attica
Category:National Archaeological Museum, Athens
Category:Marble sculptures in Greece
Category:Sculptures by Phidias
Category:Roman copies of 5th-century BC Greek sculptures
Category:1859 archaeological discoveries
Category:Unfinished sculptures