Faculty of Classics - University of Cambridge

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Eros of Centocelle

Praxiteles made a large bronze sculpture known as the Eros of Thespiae, which Pliny says was in Rome by the time he was writing, the first century CE, and since when it has disappeared. It was no doubt during its time in Rome that it inspired several Roman copies, of which this is one example.

Eros was the child of Aphrodite, and is often shown as a winged youth or later, a small child. In this sculpture he would probably have held a bow. This cast is missing the legs of the original in Rome

Material: 
Marble
Location of Original: 

Rome, Vatican, Galleria delle Statue 250

Size: 
0.85m
Accession: 

Signed by the Micheli Brothers of Berlin

References: 

Lippold: Griechische Plastik, 264 (n.11)
Walston: Catalogue of Casts in the Museum of Classical Archaeology (1889), 79, no.374(?)
Picard: Archéologie Grècque; Sculpture III (1948), 450, fig.181, pl. 8
Amelung: Catalogue of the Vatican Museum II (1908), 408-, pl. XLV
Lawrence: Classical Sculpture (1928), 249-

Date: 
C1 CE. Original: C4 BCE
Sculptor: 
Of original: School of Praxiteles
Provenance: 

Found at Centocelle on the outskirts of Rome by Gavin Hamilton in the late eighteenth century

Number: 
229

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