Ludovisi Ares
Query URLs
https://term.museum-digital.de/md-de/tag/30239
- Note
- The Ludovisi Ares is an Antonine Roman marble sculpture of Mars, a fine 2nd-century copy of a late 4th-century BCE Greek original, associated with Scopas or Lysippus: thus the Roman god of war receives his Greek name, Ares.
Ares/Mars is portrayed as young and beardless and seated on a trophy of arms, while an Eros plays about his feet, drawing attention to the fact that the god of war, in a moment of repose, is presented as a love object. The 18th-century connoisseur Johann Joachim Winckelmann, a man with a practiced eye for male beauty, found the Ludovisi Ares the most beautiful Mars that had been preserved from Antiquity, when he wrote the catalogue of the Ludovisi collection.
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Ruhender Mars (nach dem Ares Ludovisi)
Lambert Sigisbert Adam...
Object information
Image: Stiftung Preußische Schlösser und Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg - CC BY-NC-SA
References
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