Epigonus

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Epigonus (

Pergamum
in the late third century BCE.

Biography

The Dying Gaul,[4] in the Capitoline Museums, Rome.[5] The Weeping Child pitifully caressing its murdered mother is "associated with the so-called Dead Amazon in Naples, a copy of a group which was once part of the later, second Gallic dedication of Attalos, at Athens.... From drawings of this composition made in the Renaissance, we learn that the child was removed from the Naples statue during the sixteenth century".[6] Another sculpture from the same monument exists in marble copy of the Gaul Killing Himself and His Wife, formerly in the Ludovisi collection. Eight signed bases[7]
from the acropolis of Pergamon have lost their sculptures of valuable bronze, which was doubtless laboriously cut apart for the sake of the metal and refounded during Christian times.

Notes

  1. ^ His father was Charios of Pergamum.
  2. ^ "Several artists have represented the battles of Attalus and Eumenes against the Gauls: Isigonus [otherwise unknown; probably a slip for Epigonos], Pyromachus, Stratonicus, and Antigonus, who wrote books about his art." Natural History 34.84
  3. Natural History
    34.88 His "Isogonos" is doubtless a slip of the stylus.
  4. Celtic
    horn rests by his side.
  5. ^ Inv. No. 747
  6. ^ Seymour Howard, "Henry Blundell's Sleeping Venus", The Art Quarterly 31.4, 1968, pp 411–12. Howard discusses a Sleeping Hermaphroditus with suckling infants that was castrated, recarved and restored as a Venus with the infants removed.
  7. ^ The dedicatory inscriptions to Athena are translated by Stewart, op. cit.

Further reading

External links