Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
ADJUNCT MODULE B: ITALIAN ART
Preferred Title:
Statuette of Artemis of Ephesus
Alternate Title:
Ephesian Artemis
Image View:
View in the Palazzo Nuovo, amid their collection of Imperial busts
Creator:
unknown (Roman (ancient) sculptor)
Location:
repository: Musei Capitolini (Rome, Lazio, Italy)
Location Note:
Piazza del Campidoglio 1; Palazzo Nuovo
GPS:
41.893021 12.4825
Date:
original, 2nd century BCE (other)
Cultural Context:
Roman (ancient)
Style Period:
Ancient Greek; Greco-Roman
Work Type 1:
figurine
Work Type 2:
sculpture (visual work)
Classification:
Sculpture and Installations
Material:
marble; bronze
Technique:
carving (processes); casting (process)
Subjects:
deities; Artemis (Greek deity)
Description:
From the Greek point of view the Ephesian Artemis is a distinctive form of their goddess Artemis. At Ephesus, a goddess whom the Greeks associated with Artemis was venerated in an archaic, certainly pre-Hellenic cult image that was carved of wood and kept decorated with jewelry (the form is called a xoanon). The "eggs" or "breasts" of the Lady of Ephesus, it now appears, must be the iconographic descendants of the amber gourd-shaped drops, elliptical in cross-section and drilled for hanging, that were rediscovered in the excavations of 1987-1988. Most similar to Near-Eastern and Egyptian deities, and least similar to Greek ones, her body and legs are enclosed within a tapering pillar-like term, from which her feet protrude. This statuette is very similar to a large version, also in the museum, Inv. MC1182. (Source: Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/Main_Page)
Collection:
Adjunct Module B: Italian Art
Identifier:
7A3-R-CM-AEF-A04
Rights:
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.

Statuette of Artemis of Ephesus