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Image Missing: Hearst Museum object titled Recataloged to 21-122, accession number 8-5122, described as Cast of the Chiaramonti Niobid, fleeing daughter of Niobe, torso. From a marble statue discovered in the Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli. Museu Chiaramonti of the Vatican Palace, Rome. This statue differs noticeably from the Florentine replica, and is certainly truer to the Freek prototype. The Florence statue e.g. has long tight sleeved, very unusual in Greek Art. Its dress flaps back over the feet improbable. The Vatican statue is of finer, taller proportions, and is superb in the treatment of the drapery. Cloak and tunic are made of different fabrics. All the skirt is in large lines, far finer than the small of her rival. The other figures of the Niobid group are twelve: Fr.-W. 1252, a daughter shot in the neck, 12500 a fleeing one, replica of 1261 left hand raised in horror, right hand snatched at fluttering tip of cloak. Next 1249 Fr.-W. the oldest son steps on a rock and supported a wounded sister. 1255 was seenfrom behind, looking backward. 1253 youngest son was coupled with his pedagogue. 1247 wounded son, kneels. 1256 fallen and dying son. Of the other Florentine statues found with the Niobe, and added to the group from other purchases of the Medici with more or less probability of their belonging to the same prototype, the Berlin Museum has no casts. The Wrestlers were once thought to belong to the Niobid group. The Chiaramonti Museo, a foundation of Pius VII, Chiaramonti, 1800-1923 and of E.D. Visconti. The statue passed first into the Villa of Cardinal Ippolito d’Este on the Quirinal, and thence to the Vatican Museum. “The statue in F. is a mean copy, the other is a grand and boldly ycarved work, in which, however, the masterly execution only serves the general impression to be produced.” Fr.-W.
Image Missing: Hearst Museum object titled Recataloged to 21-117, accession number 8-5117, described as Cast of spearman, antique copy of the Doryphoros, a bronze statue by Polykleitos of Argos. From a marble statue of the Naples National Museum, found in a building which has since been identified as the palaestra (or gymnasium) of the city, at Pompeii, in 1797. Friederichs, Der Dory phoros des Polyklet and Archaeol. Leihing 1864, page 149, discovered the Naples statue’s derivation from the masterpiee of Polykleitos. For antique testimony about it consult Overbeck’s Schriftquellen and H. Stuart Jones s.v. For the extant copies, Furtwaengler’s Masterpieves s.v. and Mahler’s monograph Polykleitos. Their number alone indicates a work of great celebrity. The young man carried a spear on his left shoulder. His right hand hung idle. It is the pose of a dismounted horseman on a relief at Argos, Fr. -W. 504. The statue has a primitive stockiness and heaviness of figure, as a comparison with the Apoxyomenos of Lysippos shows. Its face, too, is of early type. So is its flat hair, which a later age modeled fuller, a mark of the work’s early date. This statue (original) is the best preserved, but by no means the best, artistically, of the extant antique copies. Berlin has a bettrer one of the torse-Casts no. 160--in the Pointales Collection. Right knee softer, veins indicated, more detail on back. Another----- The wiry yhandling of the hair betrays a bronze original, in which we should of course, have no tree trunk support introduced. The work has been conjecturally identified with the one which Antiquity called the Canon of Polykleitos. But it is not credible that the master composed that as a model for his pupils. The spear of a champion spear-thrower would be a light one. The one in the relief is heavy. The Doryphoros was perhaps a sepulchral portrait. The terms ?opúøopos desgnates, usually, the bodyguard of a prince. Republican Argos knew no such service. The name is the late one of an early work. The lambda part of the hair is rather peculiar to Polykleitos, and facilitates the recognition of copies of his states, both in large marbles and small bronzes.