Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
ADJUNCT MODULE A: ITALIAN ART
Preferred Title:
Dying Niobid from Gardens of Sallust
Alternate Title:
Dying Niobid
Image View:
Overall view from front right (with black background)
Creator:
unknown (Ancient Greek)
Location:
repository: Museo Nazionale Romano (Rome, Lazio, Italy) inv. 72274
Location Note:
Palazzo Massimo alle Terme; largo di Villa Peretti, 1
GPS:
41.901403 12.498216
Date:
440-430 BCE (creation)
Cultural Context:
Ancient Greek
Style Period:
Classical
Work Type 1:
sculpture (visual work)
Classification:
sculpture
Material:
marble
Technique:
carving (processes)
Measurements:
59 in (height)
Description:
The statue represents one of the daughters of Niobe who, wounded to death by an arrow, falls to her knees striving to extract it. The mythical queen, mother to seven sons and seven daughters, dared boast of being more prolific than Leto and for this reason was punished by Apollo and Artemis with the murder of her children. According to a recent hypothesis (by E. La Rocca), the statue, a Greek original dateable between 440 and 430 BCE, was part of the pedimental group of the Temple of Apollo Daphnephoros at Eretria. It was transferred to Rome in the Augustan Age by the Roman general Gaius Sosius. The statue would be successively moved to the Horti Sallustiani (Gardens of Sallust), perhaps as a component of an open air ornamental complex; it was discovered there in 1906. (Source: Area Archeology of Rome [website]; http://archeoroma.be niculturali.it/en/)
Collection:
Adjunct Module A: Italian Art
Identifier:
7A3-R-PM-NHS-A02
Rights:
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.

Dying Niobid from Gardens of Sallust