Aphrodite Wringing out her hair
Aphrodite Wringing out her hair
Published 2017-02-01T12:29:40+00:00
-- Aphrodite
Nude and seminude images of the goddess Aphrodite first became popular in the mid-4th century BC. They often seem to depict the goddess in the act of bathing—and of being surprised at her bath—but they are also associated with her mythical birth from the sea. One of the most famous such images in antiquity was a painting by the Greek artist Apelles, known as the Aphrodite Anadyomene (Aphrodite Rising from the Sea). An ancient description of the painting says that it shows how the goddess “grasping her dripping hair with her hand,… wrings the foam from the wet locks” (The Greek Anthology V, trans. W. R. Paton [Cambridge, MA 1918] 16.178). Numerous small statuettes and reliefs of a standing or crouching Aphrodite holding her hair are thought to have been indirectly inspired by this painting.
-- Who is depicted?
Aphrodite (Greek: (Afrodíti)) is the Greek goddess of love, beauty, pleasure, and procreation. She is identified with the planet Venus, and her Roman equivalent is the goddess Venus.
-- More about the artist
The artist is currently unknown.
Layer Thickness 150 microns. InFill 10%.
Date published | 01/02/2017 |
Time to do | 195 - 210 minutes |
Material Quantity | 21 grams |
Dimensions | 35mm x 40mm x 130mm |
Technology | FDM |
Complexity | Medium |
Title | Aphrodite Wringing out her hair |
Date | III Century B.C. |
Period | Antiquity |
Medium | Cast of the Roman marble copy |
Place | Imperial Academy of Arts |