Caption
Terracotta figurine of Silenus, Silenus mythology, terracotta. Figurine of an obese Silenus sitting on a rock. The figurine is hollow inside, open at the bottom. The back is only roughly worked, with a large, triangular opening. The clay is red, strongly and unevenly fired; the surface is light, cracked, and mostly chipped. The idol sits frontally, with thighs widely spread and feet crossed. The belly is sagging. The right arm rests with its elbow on the thigh, the forearm and hand stretched slightly downward. The left hand holds a waterskin resting on the rock and the side of the thigh. The small head, slightly lowered, turns to the left and downward, towards the waterskin. Silenus is partially covered by a chlamys, fastened at the right shoulder and thrown back over the left arm; the lower torso and legs are bare. Schematic modeling, head, arms, legs and waterskin rendered synthetically, with a tendency to accentuate volume. Numerous chips and surface flaking. Wide crack in the base on the left side of the figurine and at the back near the opening. 332–30 BC; Hellenistic period; sculpture; height 7 cm., A roughly textured sculptural form resembling a seated, rounded figure with simplified limbs and head, rendered in earthy tones of brown with patches of lighter beige and pale off-white, set against a solid gray background and resting on a reflective gray surface.
Credit line
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Reference
LZT26A02_343
License type
Rights managed
Available size
68.9Mb (2.0Mb) / 15.5in x 17.3in / 4648 x 5182 (300dpi)