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The Bronze Statue of Sleeping Eros in the Metropolitan Museum has long been recognized as one of the finest bronze statues to survive from antiquity. It was first published by Gisela Richter as an original Hellenistic sculpture or very close replica dated between and B. Others believe it to be a very fine Roman copy of one of the most popular sculptures ever made in Roman Imperial times known from hundreds of copies, variants and adaptations.
This article presents a new assessment based on careful scientific and technical examinations of the statue itself and a close study of other existing sculptures of this type.
Phidias and Alcamenes both created Eros statues although relatively little is known about what the sculptures looked like 1. Skopas sculpted an Eros as part of a group of statues of Eros, Pothos Longing and Himeros Yearning that was set up at a sanctuary of Aphrodite at Megara 2.
The bronze Eros by Lysippos, made ca. Eros, the archer, prepares to wound. Length 85,4 cm. Roman, Early Imperial period, 1st or early 2nd century A. The Capitoline Museums, Rome. The primordial Eros was brought into the Olympian pantheon and became the child of Aphrodite and Ares, the god of war. Aphrodite and Ares are associated in regional Greek sanctuaries from at least the Archaic period 4. However, the earliest mention of Eros in the myth of Aphrodite and Ares appears in a fragment attributed to the 5th century B.
It was not until the 4th century B. While there are a few representations of Eros as a child in Classical art, it is not until the Hellenistic period that he is predominantly portrayed as a child, which is surely a visual counterpart to the myth of Aphrodite and Ares and its literary tradition.