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Praxiteles

Praxiteles (/prækˈsɪtɪlz/; Greek: Πραξιτέλης) of Athens, the son of Cephisodotus the Elder, was the most renowned of the Attica sculptors of the 4th century BC. He was the first to sculpt the nude female form in a life-size statue. While no indubitably attributable sculpture by Praxiteles is extant, numerous copies of his works have survived; several authors, including Pliny the Elder, wrote of his works; and coins engraved with silhouettes of his various famous statuary types from the period still exist.

Medallion representing Praxiteles

A supposed relationship between Praxiteles and his beautiful model, the Thespian courtesan Phryne, has inspired speculation and interpretation in works of art ranging from painting (Gérôme) to comic opera (Saint-Saëns) to shadow play (Donnay).

Some writers have maintained that there were two sculptors of the name Praxiteles. One was a contemporary of Pheidias, and the other his more celebrated grandson. Though the repetition of the same name in every other generation is common in Greece, there is no certain evidence for either position.

Date edit

External videos
  Smarthistory – After Praxiteles, Venus (Roman Copy)[1]

Accurate dates for Praxiteles are elusive, but it is likely that he was no longer working in the time of Alexander the Great, in the absence of evidence that Alexander employed Praxiteles, as he probably would have done. Pliny's date, 364 BC, is probably that of one of his most noted works.

The subjects chosen by Praxiteles were either human beings or the dignified and less elderly deities such as Apollo, Hermes and Aphrodite rather than Zeus, Poseidon or Themis. He probably invented the S-curve.

Praxiteles and his school worked almost entirely in Parian marble. At the time the marble quarries of Paros were at their best; nor could any marble be finer for the purposes of the sculptor than that of which the Hermes from Olympia was fashioned. Some of the statues of Praxiteles were coloured by the painter Nicias, and in the opinion of the sculptor they gained greatly by this treatment.

Hermes and the Infant Dionysus edit

 
Hermes bearing the infant Dionysus, by Praxiteles, Archaeological Museum of Olympia

In 1911, the Encyclopædia Britannica noted that

Our knowledge of Praxiteles has received a great addition, and has been placed on a satisfactory basis, by the discovery at Olympia in 1877 of his statue of Hermes with the Infant Dionysus, a statue which has become famous throughout the world.[2][a]

Later opinions have varied, reaching a low with the sculptor Aristide Maillol, who railed, "It's kitsch, it's frightful, it's sculpted in Marseille soap".[3] In 1948, Carl Blümel published it in a monograph as The Hermes of a Praxiteles,[4] reversing his earlier (1927) opinion that it was a Roman copy, finding it not 4th century either, but referring it instead to a Hellenistic sculptor, a younger Praxiteles of Pergamon.[b]

The sculpture was located where Pausanias had seen it in the late 2nd century AD.[7] Hermes is represented in the act of carrying the child Dionysus to the nymphs who were charged with his rearing. The uplifted right arm is missing, but the possibility that the god holds out to the child a bunch of grapes to excite his desire would reduce the subject to a genre figure, Waldstein (1882) noted that Hermes looks past the child, "the clearest and most manifest outward sign of inward dreaming".[8]: 108  The statue is today exhibited at the Archaeological Museum of Olympia.

Opposing arguments have been made that the statue is a copy by a Roman copyist, perhaps of a work by Praxiteles that the Romans had purloined.[c] Wallace (1940) suggested a 2nd-century date and a Pergamene origin on the basis of the sandal type.[10] Other assertions have been attempted by scholars to prove the origins of the statue on the basis of the unfinished back, the appearance of the drapery, and the technique used with the drilling of the hair; however scholars cannot conclusively use any of these arguments to their advantage because exceptions exist in both Roman and Greek sculpture.

Apollo Sauroktonos edit

 
The Louvre Apollo Sauroctonos

Other works that appear to be copies of Praxiteles' sculpture express the same gracefulness in repose and indefinable charm as the Hermes and the Infant Dionysus. Among the most notable of these are the Apollo Sauroktonos, or the lizard-slayer, which portrays a youth leaning against a tree and idly striking with an arrow at a lizard. Several Roman copies from the 1st century are known including those at the Louvre Museum, the Vatican Museums, and the National Museums Liverpool.

On June 22, 2004, the Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA), announced the acquisition of an ancient bronze sculpture of Apollo Sauroktonos. The work is alleged to be the only near-complete original work by Praxiteles, though the dating and attribution of the sculpture will continue to be studied. The work was to be included in the 2007 Praxiteles exhibition organized by the Louvre Museum in Paris, but pressure from Greece, which disputes the work's provenance and legal ownership, caused the French to exclude it from the show.

Apollo Lykeios edit

The Apollo Lykeios or Lycian Apollo, another Apollo-type reclining on a tree, is usually attributed to Praxiteles. It shows the god resting on a support (a tree trunk or tripod), his right arm touching the top of his head, and his hair fixed in braids on the top of a head in a haircut typical of childhood. It is called "Lycian" not after Lycia itself, but after its identification with a lost work described by Lucian[11] as being on show in the Lykeion, one of the gymnasia of Athens.

Capitoline Satyr edit

 
The Resting Satyr

The Resting Satyr of the Capitol at Rome has commonly been regarded as a copy of one of the Satyrs of Praxiteles, but it cannot be identified in the list of his works. Moreover, the style is hard and poor; a far superior replica exists in a torso in the Louvre.[citation needed] The attitude and character of the work are certainly of Praxitelean school.

Leto, Apollo, and Artemis edit

Excavations at Mantineia in Arcadia have brought to light the base of a group of Leto, Apollo, and Artemis by Praxiteles. This base was doubtless not the work of the great sculptor himself, but of one of his assistants. Nevertheless, it is pleasing and historically valuable. Pausanias (viii. 9, I) thus describes the base, "on the base which supports the statues there are sculptured the Muses and Marsyas playing the flutes (auloi)." Three slabs which have survived represent Apollo; Marsyas; a slave, and six of the Muses, the slab which held the other three having disappeared.

Leconfield Head edit

The Leconfield Head (a head of the Aphrodite of Cnidus type, included in the 2007 exhibition at the Louvre)[12] in the Red Room, Petworth House, West Sussex, UK, was claimed by Adolf Furtwängler[13] to be an actual work of Praxiteles, based on its style and its intrinsic quality. The Leconfield Head, the keystone of the Greek antiquities at Petworth[14] was probably bought from Gavin Hamilton in Rome in 1755.

Aberdeen Head edit

The Aberdeen Head, whether of Hermes or of a youthful Heracles, in the British Museum, is linked to Praxiteles by its striking resemblance to the Hermes of Olympia.[15]

Aphrodite of Cnidus edit

 
Aphrodite of Cnidus

Aphrodite of Cnidus was Praxiteles's most famous statue. It was the first time that a full-scale female figure was portrayed nude. It was bought by the people of Cnidus, and according to Pliny valued so highly by them that they refused to sell it to King Nicomedes in exchange for discharging the city's enormous debt. Many copies survive, the Colonna Venus in the Vatican Museums often having been considered the most faithful to the original.[16]

Its renown was such, that it was immortalised in a lyric epigram:

Paris did see me naked,
Adonis, and Anchises,
except I knew all three of them.
Where did the sculptor see me?

Artemis of Antikyra edit

According to Pausanias there was a statue of Artemis made by Praxiteles in her temple in Anticyra of Phokis.[17] The appearance of the statue, which represented the goddess with a torch and an arch in her hands and a dog at her feet, is known from a 2nd-century BC bronze coin of the city.[18] A recently discovered dedicatory inscription of the 3rd-2nd century identifies the goddess at Antikya as Artemis Eleithyia.[19]

Uncertain attributions edit

Vitruvius (vii, praef. 13) lists Praxiteles as an artist on the Mausoleum of Maussollos and Strabo (xiv, 23, 51) attributes to him the whole sculpted decoration of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus. These mentions are widely considered as dubious.[20]

Roman copies edit

 
This marble statue of a satyr pouring wine is a Roman copy after a once celebrated (but now lost) statue by Praxiteles, c. 370–360 BC. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.

Besides these works, associated with Praxiteles by reference to notices in ancient writers, there are numerous copies from the Roman age, statues of Hermes, Dionysus, Aphrodite, Satyrs and Nymphs, and the like, in which a varied expression of Praxitelean style may be discerned.[citation needed]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "But the figure of the Hermes, full and solid without being fleshy, at once strong and active, is a masterpiece, and the play of surface is astonishing. In the head we have a remarkably rounded and intelligent shape, and the face expresses the perfection of health and enjoyment. This statue must for the future be our best evidence for the style of Praxiteles. It altogether confirms and interprets the statements as to Praxiteles made by Pliny and other ancient critics."[2]
  2. ^ Attribution to a younger Praxiteles on the basis of the inscription Pergamon VIII, 1, 137 – as first suggested by Morgan (1937).[5] Carpenter (1954) dismissed this younger Praxiteles as a phantom.[6]
  3. ^ The career of the Olympia Hermes reputation was summed up by Wycherley (1982); his advice was to trust to the judgment of Pausanias in this matter.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ . Smarthistory at Khan Academy. Archived from the original on March 10, 2014. Retrieved December 18, 2012.
  2. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica, 1911.
  3. ^ Cladel, J. (1937). Maillol. Sa vie, son œuvre, ses idées. Paris. p. 98. C'est pompier, c'est affreux, c'est sculpté du savon de Marseille.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Blümel, Carl (1948). Der Hermes eine Praxiteles. Baden-Baden, DE.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Morgan, C.H. (1937). "The drapery of the Hermes of Praxiteles". Archaiologike Ephemeris: 61–68.
  6. ^ Carpenter, Rhys (January 1954). "Two postscripts to the Hermes controversy". American Journal of Archaeology. 58 (1): 4–6. doi:10.2307/500766. JSTOR 500766. S2CID 191376162.
  7. ^ Pausanias. Description of Greece. 5.17.3. refers to the stone sculpture as techne of Praxiteles
  8. ^ Waldstein, C. (1882). "Hermes with the infant Dionysos. Bronze Statuette in the Louvre". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 3: 107–110. doi:10.2307/623529. JSTOR 623529. S2CID 162005966.
  9. ^ Wycherley, R.E. (1982). "Pausanias and Praxiteles". Hesperia Supplements. 20: 182–191. doi:10.2307/1353960. JSTOR 1353960. Studies in Spartan Architecture, Sculpture and Topography. Presented to Ion A. Thompson
  10. ^ Wallace, Mary (1940). "Sutor supra Crepidam". American Journal of Archaeology. 44: 366–367. doi:10.2307/499414. JSTOR 499414. S2CID 191374605.
  11. ^ Anacharsis (7).
  12. ^ Illustration of a cast.
  13. ^ Furtwängler, Meisterwerken der Griechischen Plastik, 1893.
  14. ^ Margaret Wyndham, Catalogue of the Collection of Greek and Roman Antiquities in the possession of Lord Leconfield (London:Medici Society) 1916.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-10-18. Retrieved 2017-06-15.
  16. ^ Seaman, Kristen (2004). "Retrieving the Original Aphrodite of Knidos". Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Rendiconti Classe di scienze morali, storiche e filologiche. 9. 15 (3): 538–541.
  17. ^ Rizzo G.-E., Prassitele (Milan – Rome 1932), p. 13. Lacroix L., Les reproductions de statues sur les monnaies grecques (Liége 1949), pp. 309–310; Corso A., Prassitele. Fonti Epigrafiche e letterarie. Vita et opere, vol. 1 (Roma 1988), pp. 182–184. Rolley C., La Sculpture Grecque 2, La période classique (Paris 1999), p. 244.
  18. ^ Sideris Α., "Antikyra: An ancient Phokian City", Emvolimo 43–44 (Spring–Summer 2001) pp. 123–124 (in Greek).
  19. ^ Published in Supplementum Epigraphicum Graec. 49-567.
  20. ^ B.S. Ridgway, op. cit., p.265; Pasquier and Martinez, op. cit., p.20 and pp.83–84.

References edit

Bibliography edit

  • Aileen Ajootian, "Praxiteles", Personal Styles in Greek Sculpture (ed. Olga Palagia and J. J. Pollitt), Cambridge University Press, 1998 (1st publication 1996) (ISBN 0-521-65738-5), pp. 91–129.
  • (in Italian) Antonio Corso, Prassitele, Fonti Epigrafiche e Lettarie, Vita e Opere, three vol., De Lucca, Rome, 1988 and 1991.
  • (in French) Marion Muller-Dufeu, La Sculpture grecque. Sources littéraires et épigraphiques, éditions de l'École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, coll. « Beaux-Arts histoire », Paris, 2002 (ISBN 2-84056-087-9), p. 481-521 (new edition of Overbeck's Antiquen Schiftquellen, 1868).
  • (in French) Alain Pasquier and Jean-Luc Martinez, Praxitèle, catalogue of the exhibition at the Louvre Museum, March 23-June 18, 2007, Louvre editions & Somogy, Paris, 2007 (ISBN 978-2-35031-111-1).
  • Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway, Fourth-Century Styles in Greek Sculpture, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, (ISBN 0-299-15470-X), 1997, pp. 258–267.
  • (in French) Claude Rolley, La Sculpture grecque II : la période classique, Picard, coll. « Manuels d'art et d'archéologie antiques », 1999 (ISBN 2-7084-0506-3), pp. 242–267.
  • Andrew Stewart, Greek Sculpture: An Exploration, Yale University Press, New Haven & London, 1990 (ISBN 0-300-04072-5) pp. 277–281.

External links edit

  • CMA Collections: Apollo Sauroktonos by Praxiteles
  • Small head of Aphrodite – Olympia – believed to be an original work by Praxiteles
  • 2007 Praxitèle: 2007 exhibition at the Musée du Louvre Exhibition catalogue by Alain Pasquier and Jean-Luc Martinez.
  • Antonio Corso. The Art of Praxilites. L'ERma di Bretschneider, Roma 2004. Vol I. The development of Praxiteles' workshop and its cultural tradition until the sculptor's acme (364-1 BC)
  • Antonio Corso. The Art of Praxilites. L'ERma di Bretschneider, Roma 2004. Vol II. The mature years
  • Artcyclopedia: Praxiteles

praxiteles, asteroid, 5983, crater, mercury, crater, greek, Πραξιτέλης, athens, cephisodotus, elder, most, renowned, attica, sculptors, century, first, sculpt, nude, female, form, life, size, statue, while, indubitably, attributable, sculpture, extant, numerou. For the asteroid see 5983 Praxiteles For the crater on Mercury see Praxiteles crater Praxiteles p r ae k ˈ s ɪ t ɪ l iː z Greek Pra3itelhs of Athens the son of Cephisodotus the Elder was the most renowned of the Attica sculptors of the 4th century BC He was the first to sculpt the nude female form in a life size statue While no indubitably attributable sculpture by Praxiteles is extant numerous copies of his works have survived several authors including Pliny the Elder wrote of his works and coins engraved with silhouettes of his various famous statuary types from the period still exist Medallion representing PraxitelesA supposed relationship between Praxiteles and his beautiful model the Thespian courtesan Phryne has inspired speculation and interpretation in works of art ranging from painting Gerome to comic opera Saint Saens to shadow play Donnay Some writers have maintained that there were two sculptors of the name Praxiteles One was a contemporary of Pheidias and the other his more celebrated grandson Though the repetition of the same name in every other generation is common in Greece there is no certain evidence for either position Contents 1 Date 1 1 Hermes and the Infant Dionysus 1 2 Apollo Sauroktonos 1 3 Apollo Lykeios 1 4 Capitoline Satyr 1 5 Leto Apollo and Artemis 1 6 Leconfield Head 1 7 Aberdeen Head 1 8 Aphrodite of Cnidus 1 9 Artemis of Antikyra 1 10 Uncertain attributions 1 11 Roman copies 2 See also 3 Footnotes 4 References 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksDate editExternal videos nbsp Smarthistory After Praxiteles Venus Roman Copy 1 Accurate dates for Praxiteles are elusive but it is likely that he was no longer working in the time of Alexander the Great in the absence of evidence that Alexander employed Praxiteles as he probably would have done Pliny s date 364 BC is probably that of one of his most noted works The subjects chosen by Praxiteles were either human beings or the dignified and less elderly deities such as Apollo Hermes and Aphrodite rather than Zeus Poseidon or Themis He probably invented the S curve Praxiteles and his school worked almost entirely in Parian marble At the time the marble quarries of Paros were at their best nor could any marble be finer for the purposes of the sculptor than that of which the Hermes from Olympia was fashioned Some of the statues of Praxiteles were coloured by the painter Nicias and in the opinion of the sculptor they gained greatly by this treatment Hermes and the Infant Dionysus edit Main article Hermes and the Infant Dionysus nbsp Hermes bearing the infant Dionysus by Praxiteles Archaeological Museum of OlympiaIn 1911 the Encyclopaedia Britannica noted that Our knowledge of Praxiteles has received a great addition and has been placed on a satisfactory basis by the discovery at Olympia in 1877 of his statue of Hermes with the Infant Dionysus a statue which has become famous throughout the world 2 a Later opinions have varied reaching a low with the sculptor Aristide Maillol who railed It s kitsch it s frightful it s sculpted in Marseille soap 3 In 1948 Carl Blumel published it in a monograph as The Hermes ofaPraxiteles 4 reversing his earlier 1927 opinion that it was a Roman copy finding it not 4th century either but referring it instead to a Hellenistic sculptor a younger Praxiteles of Pergamon b The sculpture was located where Pausanias had seen it in the late 2nd century AD 7 Hermes is represented in the act of carrying the child Dionysus to the nymphs who were charged with his rearing The uplifted right arm is missing but the possibility that the god holds out to the child a bunch of grapes to excite his desire would reduce the subject to a genre figure Waldstein 1882 noted that Hermes looks past the child the clearest and most manifest outward sign of inward dreaming 8 108 The statue is today exhibited at the Archaeological Museum of Olympia Opposing arguments have been made that the statue is a copy by a Roman copyist perhaps of a work by Praxiteles that the Romans had purloined c Wallace 1940 suggested a 2nd century date and a Pergamene origin on the basis of the sandal type 10 Other assertions have been attempted by scholars to prove the origins of the statue on the basis of the unfinished back the appearance of the drapery and the technique used with the drilling of the hair however scholars cannot conclusively use any of these arguments to their advantage because exceptions exist in both Roman and Greek sculpture Apollo Sauroktonos edit nbsp The Louvre Apollo SauroctonosOther works that appear to be copies of Praxiteles sculpture express the same gracefulness in repose and indefinable charm as the Hermes and the Infant Dionysus Among the most notable of these are the Apollo Sauroktonos or the lizard slayer which portrays a youth leaning against a tree and idly striking with an arrow at a lizard Several Roman copies from the 1st century are known including those at the Louvre Museum the Vatican Museums and the National Museums Liverpool On June 22 2004 the Cleveland Museum of Art CMA announced the acquisition of an ancient bronze sculpture of Apollo Sauroktonos The work is alleged to be the only near complete original work by Praxiteles though the dating and attribution of the sculpture will continue to be studied The work was to be included in the 2007 Praxiteles exhibition organized by the Louvre Museum in Paris but pressure from Greece which disputes the work s provenance and legal ownership caused the French to exclude it from the show Apollo Lykeios edit The Apollo Lykeios or Lycian Apollo another Apollo type reclining on a tree is usually attributed to Praxiteles It shows the god resting on a support a tree trunk or tripod his right arm touching the top of his head and his hair fixed in braids on the top of a head in a haircut typical of childhood It is called Lycian not after Lycia itself but after its identification with a lost work described by Lucian 11 as being on show in the Lykeion one of the gymnasia of Athens Capitoline Satyr edit nbsp The Resting SatyrThe Resting Satyr of the Capitol at Rome has commonly been regarded as a copy of one of the Satyrs of Praxiteles but it cannot be identified in the list of his works Moreover the style is hard and poor a far superior replica exists in a torso in the Louvre citation needed The attitude and character of the work are certainly of Praxitelean school Leto Apollo and Artemis edit Excavations at Mantineia in Arcadia have brought to light the base of a group of Leto Apollo and Artemis by Praxiteles This base was doubtless not the work of the great sculptor himself but of one of his assistants Nevertheless it is pleasing and historically valuable Pausanias viii 9 I thus describes the base on the base which supports the statues there are sculptured the Muses and Marsyas playing the flutes auloi Three slabs which have survived represent Apollo Marsyas a slave and six of the Muses the slab which held the other three having disappeared Leconfield Head edit The Leconfield Head a head of the Aphrodite of Cnidus type included in the 2007 exhibition at the Louvre 12 in the Red Room Petworth House West Sussex UK was claimed by Adolf Furtwangler 13 to be an actual work of Praxiteles based on its style and its intrinsic quality The Leconfield Head the keystone of the Greek antiquities at Petworth 14 was probably bought from Gavin Hamilton in Rome in 1755 Aberdeen Head edit The Aberdeen Head whether of Hermes or of a youthful Heracles in the British Museum is linked to Praxiteles by its striking resemblance to the Hermes of Olympia 15 Aphrodite of Cnidus edit nbsp Aphrodite of CnidusAphrodite of Cnidus was Praxiteles s most famous statue It was the first time that a full scale female figure was portrayed nude It was bought by the people of Cnidus and according to Pliny valued so highly by them that they refused to sell it to King Nicomedes in exchange for discharging the city s enormous debt Many copies survive the Colonna Venus in the Vatican Museums often having been considered the most faithful to the original 16 Its renown was such that it was immortalised in a lyric epigram Paris did see me naked Adonis and Anchises except I knew all three of them Where did the sculptor see me Artemis of Antikyra edit According to Pausanias there was a statue of Artemis made by Praxiteles in her temple in Anticyra of Phokis 17 The appearance of the statue which represented the goddess with a torch and an arch in her hands and a dog at her feet is known from a 2nd century BC bronze coin of the city 18 A recently discovered dedicatory inscription of the 3rd 2nd century identifies the goddess at Antikya as Artemis Eleithyia 19 Uncertain attributions edit Vitruvius vii praef 13 lists Praxiteles as an artist on the Mausoleum of Maussollos and Strabo xiv 23 51 attributes to him the whole sculpted decoration of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus These mentions are widely considered as dubious 20 Roman copies edit nbsp This marble statue of a satyr pouring wine is a Roman copy after a once celebrated but now lost statue by Praxiteles c 370 360 BC Walters Art Museum Baltimore Besides these works associated with Praxiteles by reference to notices in ancient writers there are numerous copies from the Roman age statues of Hermes Dionysus Aphrodite Satyrs and Nymphs and the like in which a varied expression of Praxitelean style may be discerned citation needed See also editMarble sculptureFootnotes edit But the figure of the Hermes full and solid without being fleshy at once strong and active is a masterpiece and the play of surface is astonishing In the head we have a remarkably rounded and intelligent shape and the face expresses the perfection of health and enjoyment This statue must for the future be our best evidence for the style of Praxiteles It altogether confirms and interprets the statements as to Praxiteles made by Pliny and other ancient critics 2 Attribution to a younger Praxiteles on the basis of the inscription Pergamon VIII 1 137 as first suggested by Morgan 1937 5 Carpenter 1954 dismissed this younger Praxiteles as a phantom 6 The career of the Olympia Hermes reputation was summed up by Wycherley 1982 his advice was to trust to the judgment of Pausanias in this matter 9 References edit After Praxiteles Venus Roman Copy Smarthistory at Khan Academy Archived from the original on March 10 2014 Retrieved December 18 2012 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911 Cladel J 1937 Maillol Sa vie son œuvre ses idees Paris p 98 C est pompier c est affreux c est sculpte du savon de Marseille a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Blumel Carl 1948 Der Hermes eine Praxiteles Baden Baden DE a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Morgan C H 1937 The drapery of the Hermes of Praxiteles Archaiologike Ephemeris 61 68 Carpenter Rhys January 1954 Two postscripts to the Hermes controversy American Journal of Archaeology 58 1 4 6 doi 10 2307 500766 JSTOR 500766 S2CID 191376162 Pausanias Description of Greece 5 17 3 refers to the stone sculpture as techne of Praxiteles Waldstein C 1882 Hermes with the infant Dionysos Bronze Statuette in the Louvre The Journal of Hellenic Studies 3 107 110 doi 10 2307 623529 JSTOR 623529 S2CID 162005966 Wycherley R E 1982 Pausanias and Praxiteles Hesperia Supplements 20 182 191 doi 10 2307 1353960 JSTOR 1353960 Studies in Spartan Architecture Sculpture and Topography Presented to Ion A Thompson Wallace Mary 1940 Sutor supra Crepidam American Journal of Archaeology 44 366 367 doi 10 2307 499414 JSTOR 499414 S2CID 191374605 Anacharsis 7 Illustration of a cast Furtwangler Meisterwerken der Griechischen Plastik 1893 Margaret Wyndham Catalogue of the Collection of Greek and Roman Antiquities in the possession of Lord Leconfield London Medici Society 1916 British Museum Highlights Archived from the original on 2015 10 18 Retrieved 2017 06 15 Seaman Kristen 2004 Retrieving the Original Aphrodite of Knidos Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei Rendiconti Classe di scienze morali storiche e filologiche 9 15 3 538 541 Rizzo G E Prassitele Milan Rome 1932 p 13 Lacroix L Les reproductions de statues sur les monnaies grecques Liege 1949 pp 309 310 Corso A Prassitele Fonti Epigrafiche e letterarie Vita et opere vol 1 Roma 1988 pp 182 184 Rolley C La Sculpture Grecque 2 La periode classique Paris 1999 p 244 Sideris A Antikyra An ancient Phokian City Emvolimo 43 44 Spring Summer 2001 pp 123 124 in Greek Published in Supplementum Epigraphicum Graec 49 567 B S Ridgway op cit p 265 Pasquier and Martinez op cit p 20 and pp 83 84 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Percy Gardner 1911 Praxiteles In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 255 256 Bibliography editAileen Ajootian Praxiteles Personal Styles in Greek Sculpture ed Olga Palagia and J J Pollitt Cambridge University Press 1998 1st publication 1996 ISBN 0 521 65738 5 pp 91 129 in Italian Antonio Corso Prassitele Fonti Epigrafiche e Lettarie Vita e Opere three vol De Lucca Rome 1988 and 1991 in French Marion Muller Dufeu La Sculpture grecque Sources litteraires et epigraphiques editions de l Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux Arts coll Beaux Arts histoire Paris 2002 ISBN 2 84056 087 9 p 481 521 new edition of Overbeck s Antiquen Schiftquellen 1868 in French Alain Pasquier and Jean Luc Martinez Praxitele catalogue of the exhibition at the Louvre Museum March 23 June 18 2007 Louvre editions amp Somogy Paris 2007 ISBN 978 2 35031 111 1 Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway Fourth Century Styles in Greek Sculpture University of Wisconsin Press Madison ISBN 0 299 15470 X 1997 pp 258 267 in French Claude Rolley La Sculpture grecque II la periode classique Picard coll Manuels d art et d archeologie antiques 1999 ISBN 2 7084 0506 3 pp 242 267 Andrew Stewart Greek Sculpture An Exploration Yale University Press New Haven amp London 1990 ISBN 0 300 04072 5 pp 277 281 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Praxiteles nbsp Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article Praxiteles Archaeological Museum of Olympia The Hermes of Praxiteles CMA Collections Apollo Sauroktonos by Praxiteles About Apollo Sauroktonos statues in marble and bronze Small head of Aphrodite Olympia believed to be an original work by Praxiteles 2007 Praxitele 2007 exhibition at the Musee du Louvre Exhibition catalogue by Alain Pasquier and Jean Luc Martinez Antonio Corso The Art of Praxilites L ERma di Bretschneider Roma 2004 Vol I The development of Praxiteles workshop and its cultural tradition until the sculptor s acme 364 1 BC Antonio Corso The Art of Praxilites L ERma di Bretschneider Roma 2004 Vol II The mature years Artcyclopedia Praxiteles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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