Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
ADJUNCT MODULE B: ITALIAN ART
Preferred Title:
Ludovisi Cnidian Aphrodite
Alternate Title:
Aphrodite of Cnidos (Roman copy)
Image View:
Detail, drapery falling to an urn (restoration by Ippolito Buzzi)
Creator:
after Praxiteles (Ancient Greek sculptor, active ca. 375-340 BCE); unknown (Roman (ancient) sculptor)
Location:
repository: Museo Nazionale Romano (Rome, Lazio, Italy) inv. 8619
Location Note:
via Sant’Apollinare, 46 (Palazzo Altemps); Ludovisi collection, formerly the Cesi collection
GPS:
41.901169 12.473062
Date:
Roman copy, ca. 100-199 CE (creation)
Cultural Context:
Roman (ancient)
Work Type 1:
sculpture (visual work)
Classification:
Sculpture and Installations
Material:
marble
Subjects:
human figure; mythology (Classical); Aphrodite (Greek deity); Venus (Roman deity); Venus Pudica; Knidos
Description:
The torso (from neck to just above the knees) is a Roman copy of the 2nd century CE, all the rest is a restoration of the 17th century by the sculptor Ippolito Buzzi (1562-1634). Buzzi probably used a head of Aphrodite as a model, also from the Ludovisi collection, which is mentioned in the inventories as a Niobe (inv. n. 8586). The Aphrodite of Knidos was one of the most famous works of the ancient Greek sculptor Praxiteles of Athens (ca. 350 BCE). It and its copies are often referred to as the Venus Pudica ("modest Venus") type, on account of her covering her naked pubis with her right hand. [Information from museum label.]
Collection:
Adjunct Module B: Italian Art
Identifier:
7A3-R-PAL-SKA-A06
Rights:
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.

Ludovisi Cnidian Aphrodite