Sleeping Eros in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, S…
Kylix by the Painter of Bologna in the Metropolita…
Tondo Detail of a Kylix by the Painter of Bologna…
Bronze Portrait Bust of a Man in the Metropolitan…
Terracotta Bell Krater with a Dionysiac Scene in t…
Detail of a Terracotta Bell Krater with a Dionysia…
Neck Amphora with Twisted Handles by the Suessula…
Kylix by Douris with a Woman Working in the Tondo…
Kylix with a Seated Poet and a Youth by Douris in…
Detail of a Kylix with a Seated Poet and a Youth b…
Terracotta Lekanis Attributed to the Stutgart Grou…
South Italian Kernos in the Metropolitan Museum of…
Man with a Mole on his Nose in the Metropolitan Mu…
Thin-Faced Man Fayum Portrait in the Metropolitan…
Youth with a Surgical Cut in the Right Eye in the…
Detail of a Kylix with Two Nude Women in the Tondo…
Detail of a Kylix with Two Nude Women in the Tondo…
Amphora by the Berlin Painter in the Metropolitan…
Detail of an Amphora by the Berlin Painter in the…
Amphora by the Berlin Painter in the Metropolitan…
Etruscan Terracotta Antefix with a Head of a Woman…
Etruscan Painted Terracotta Antefix with the Head…
Detail of an Etruscan Painted Terracotta Antefix w…
Sleeping Eros in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, S…
Detail of Sleeping Eros in the Metropolitan Museum…
Bronze Statue of a Camillus in the Metropolitan Mu…
Detail of a Bronze Statue of a Camillus in the Met…
Bronze Statue of a Camillus in the Metropolitan Mu…
Landscape with Perseus and Andromeda: From the "My…
Landscape with Perseus and Andromeda: From the "My…
Landscape with Perseus and Andromeda: From the "My…
Landscape with Perseus and Andromeda: From the "My…
Roman Glass Study Case in the Metropolitan Museum…
Roman Glass Plate from the Study Collection in the…
Roman Glass from the Study Collection in the Metro…
Etruscan Terracotta Head of a Youth in the Metropo…
Lion's Head Water Spout from the Old Greek & Roman…
Architectural Revetment from the Old Greek & Roman…
Etruscan Terracotta Phiale in the Metropolitan Mus…
Etruscan Terracotta Phiale in the Metropolitan Mus…
Nenfro Statue of a Winged Lion in the Metropolitan…
Nenfro Statue of a Winged Lion in the Metropolitan…
Fragment of a Nenfro Tomb Slab in the Metropolitan…
Venus and Cupid by Lorenzo Lotto in the Metropolit…
Detail of Venus and Cupid by Lorenzo Lotto in the…
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
613 visits
Sleeping Eros in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Sept. 2007


Statue of Eros sleeping, Hellenistic or Augustan, 3rd century B.C.–early 1st century A.D.
Greek or Roman
Bronze; L. 33 9/16 in. (85.24 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1943 (43.11.4)
The Hellenistic period introduced the accurate characterization of age. Young children enjoyed great favor, whether in mythological form, as baby Herakles or Eros, or in genre scenes, playing with each other or with pets. This Eros, god of love, has been brought down to earth and disarmed, a conception considerably different from that of the powerful, often cruel, and capricious being so often addressed in Archaic poetry. One of the few bronze statues to have survived from antiquity, this figure of a plump baby in relaxed pose conveys a sense of the immediacy and naturalistic detail that the medium of bronze made possible. He is clearly based on firsthand observation. The support on which the god rests is a modern addition, but the work originally would have had a separate base, most likely of stone.
This statue is the finest example of its kind. Judging from the large number of extant replicas, the type was popular in Hellenistic and, especially, Roman times. In the Roman period, statues of Sleeping Eros decorated villa gardens and fountains. Their function in the Hellenistic period, however, is less clear. They may have been used as dedications within a sanctuary of Aphrodite or possibly erected in a public park or private, even royal, garden.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/04/eusb/hod_43.11.4.htm
Greek or Roman
Bronze; L. 33 9/16 in. (85.24 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1943 (43.11.4)
The Hellenistic period introduced the accurate characterization of age. Young children enjoyed great favor, whether in mythological form, as baby Herakles or Eros, or in genre scenes, playing with each other or with pets. This Eros, god of love, has been brought down to earth and disarmed, a conception considerably different from that of the powerful, often cruel, and capricious being so often addressed in Archaic poetry. One of the few bronze statues to have survived from antiquity, this figure of a plump baby in relaxed pose conveys a sense of the immediacy and naturalistic detail that the medium of bronze made possible. He is clearly based on firsthand observation. The support on which the god rests is a modern addition, but the work originally would have had a separate base, most likely of stone.
This statue is the finest example of its kind. Judging from the large number of extant replicas, the type was popular in Hellenistic and, especially, Roman times. In the Roman period, statues of Sleeping Eros decorated villa gardens and fountains. Their function in the Hellenistic period, however, is less clear. They may have been used as dedications within a sanctuary of Aphrodite or possibly erected in a public park or private, even royal, garden.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/toah/ho/04/eusb/hod_43.11.4.htm
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.