Timotheos

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Roman marble of Leda and the Swan (Prado)
Roman marble of Leda and the Swan (Prado)
Leda and the Swan (Yale University Art Gallery)
Leda and the Swan (Yale University Art Gallery)

Timotheos was a Greek sculptor of the fourth century BCE, one of the rivals and contemporaries of Scopas of Paros, among the sculptors who worked for their own fame on the Mausoleum of Mausolus at Halicarnassus between 353 and 350 BCE.[1] He was apparently the leading sculptor at the temple of Asklepios at Epidauros, ca. 380 BCE. To him is attributed[2] a sculpture of Leda and the Swan in which the queen Leda of Sparta, protected the swan from an eagle, on the basis of which a Roman marble copy in the Capitoline Museums[3] is said to be "after Timotheos". The theme must have been popular, judging from more than two dozen Roman marble copies that survive.[4] The most famous version has been that in the Capitoline Museums, Rome, purchased by the pope from the heirs of Alessandro Cardinal Albani The highly restored version in the illustration at right is in the Museo del Prado, the incomplete one at left in the Yale Art Museum, New Haven, Connecticut.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History 36.30-31.
  2. ^ The connection with Timotheos was first made by Franz Winter, (Mittheil. Arch. Athen. 1894:157-62 and pl. vi), on the basis of comparison of drapery of a Nereid or a Hygeia of Timotheos, just at that time being excavated at Epidauros. (Adolf Michaelis, A Century of Archaeological Discoveries (1908:313)
  3. ^ Inv. MC0302.
  4. ^ Richard Hamann, "Original und Kopie" Marburger Jahrbuch für Kunstwissenschaft 15 (1949, pp. 135-156) p 153.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Reiche, A. "Die copien der 'Leda von Timotheos'" Antike Plastik 17 (1978:21-55).
  • Kunzl, E. and G. Horn, Die 'Hygeia' des Timotheos 1969.
  • Schorb, B. Timotheos 1965.