Aphrodite Torso

Description

No single sculpture in the history of Western art has been more influential than Praxiteles’s Knidian Aphrodite, carved in the 4th century BC. The first sculpted nude figure of the goddess of love, it became a famous tourist attraction and made Praxiteles a celebrity in the Greek world. The shocking originality of showing the goddess unaware that she had been seen emerging from her bath made a lasting impression. It became a prototype for generations of Greek and Roman sculptors. Its popularity inspired many variations, including this one. The sensitivity of the carving, seen to advantage in the wet hair falling on the shoulders, imparts a dynamic sensuality.

Provenance

Dr. Jacob Hirsch (1874-1955), New York, NY, Switzerland, Paris, France (Early 1900s); Friedrich (Fritz) Ludwig von Gans (1833-1920), Frankfurt, Germany (Before 1920); Kunsthandel K. W. Bachstitz (Kurt Walter Bachstitz), Berlin, Germany (1921-1924? or later); Herr Max Emden, Berlin, Germany and Villa Brissago, Switzerland (before 1935); Dr. Robert Käppeli, Lucerne, Switzerland, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1935-1988); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1988-)

Aphrodite Torso

[]

200–1 BCE

Accession Number

1988.9

Medium

Thasian marble

Dimensions

Overall: 66.3 x 36.2 cm (26 1/8 x 14 1/4 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

John L. Severance Fund