Cleon (sculptor)

Cleon (Greek: Κλέων της Σικυώνος) was an Ancient Greek sculptor of Sicyon. He was a pupil of Antiphanes, who had been taught by Periclytus, a follower of the great Polykleitos of Argos.[1]

Cleon's age is determined by two bronze statues of Zeus at Olympia executed after the 98th Olympiad, and another of Deinolochus, after the 102nd Olympiad.[2] He excelled in portrait-statues[3] of which several athletic ones are mentioned by Pausanias.[4]

References

This article incorporates text by Leonhard Schmitz from the article "Cleon" in the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870), vol. 1, p. 798-99.

  1. ^ Paus, v. 17. § 1.
  2. ^ Paus. vi. 1. § 2.
  3. ^ Philosophos, Plin. PI. N. xxxiv. 19, is to be taken as a general term,
  4. ^ vi. 3. § 4, 8. § 3, 9. § 1, 10, fin.