LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: general

Equestrian Statue of General Sherman Preceded by V…

17 Jun 2006 408
The resplendent gold-leaf General William Tecumseh Sherman Statue at Grand Army Plaza was the last major work of distinguished American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and won a Grand Prix at the Paris Exposition of 1900. text from: www.nyc-architecture.com/CP/cp023.htm

Equestrian Statue of General Sherman Preceded by V…

17 Jun 2006 391
The resplendent gold-leaf General William Tecumseh Sherman Statue at Grand Army Plaza was the last major work of distinguished American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and won a Grand Prix at the Paris Exposition of 1900. text from: www.nyc-architecture.com/CP/cp023.htm

Marble Head of a Greek General in the Metropolitan…

14 Aug 2008 458
Marble head of a Greek general Roman, Imperial period, 1st - 2nd century AD Copy of a Greek bronze statue of the mid-4th century BC Accession # 24.97.32 This powerful portrayal of a man of action belongs to a type popular in Roman times. One suggestion for his identity is the strategos (general) Phokion, pupil of Plato and one of the foremost Athenian statesmen of the fourth century BC, but there is little evidence to support that theory. We do not know if the original statue was a contemporary portrait, like the famous fifth-century portrait of the Athenian statesman and general Perikles, or a posthumous work. It could even be a representation of a hero from the mythic past. He wears a Corinthian helmet pushed up and resting on the back of his head. The helmet is elaborately decorated in relief with griffins on the bowl and rams' heads on the cheek pieces and is similiar to a type worn by the goddess Athena. His eyes would have been inlaid in another material. The head has been worked on for insertion into a statue. Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.

Marble Head of a Greek General in the Metropolitan…

02 Aug 2007 934
Marble head of a Greek general Roman, Imperial period, 1st - 2nd century AD Copy of a Greek bronze statue of the mid-4th century BC Accession # 24.97.32 This powerful portrayal of a man of action belongs to a type popular in Roman times. One suggestion for his identity is the strategos (general) Phokion, pupil of Plato and one of the foremost Athenian statesmen of the fourth century BC, but there is little evidence to support that theory. We do not know if the original statue was a contemporary portrait, like the famous fifth-century portrait of the Athenian statesman and general Perikles, or a posthumous work. It could even be a representation of a hero from the mythic past. He wears a Corinthian helmet pushed up and resting on the back of his head. The helmet is elaborately decorated in relief with griffins on the bowl and rams' heads on the cheek pieces and is similiar to a type worn by the goddess Athena. His eyes would have been inlaid in another material. The head has been worked on for insertion into a statue. Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.

Marble Head of a Greek General in the Metropolitan…

14 Aug 2008 527
Marble head of a Greek general Roman, Imperial period, 1st - 2nd century AD Copy of a Greek bronze statue of the mid-4th century BC Accession # 24.97.32 This powerful portrayal of a man of action belongs to a type popular in Roman times. One suggestion for his identity is the strategos (general) Phokion, pupil of Plato and one of the foremost Athenian statesmen of the fourth century BC, but there is little evidence to support that theory. We do not know if the original statue was a contemporary portrait, like the famous fifth-century portrait of the Athenian statesman and general Perikles, or a posthumous work. It could even be a representation of a hero from the mythic past. He wears a Corinthian helmet pushed up and resting on the back of his head. The helmet is elaborately decorated in relief with griffins on the bowl and rams' heads on the cheek pieces and is similiar to a type worn by the goddess Athena. His eyes would have been inlaid in another material. The head has been worked on for insertion into a statue. Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.