Art Roman Gallery
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A bust of Demeter, here identified with the Egyptian goddess Isis. Unknown Egyptian artist, 1st cen
A marble statue of the goddess Isis, holding her characteristic instrument, the sistrum (rattle). U
Head of Dionysos, Roman artwork inspired from Hellenistic models.
Ancient roman statue of a yung girl in the dress of Artemis, 60-79 A.D.
thesilenceofthemarble:Apollo Citharede, roman copy of a hellenistic original about 200-150 BC, Capit
Flora FarneseRoman marble sculpture based on a Greek model from the 5th century BC2nd century ADMuse
Afrodite SosandraRoman marble copy of an original attributed to the Greek sculptor Calamis (ca. 460
John Byam Liston Shaw (1872-1919), 'Diana of the Hunt’, 1901
The Venus Pudica (Modest Venus)2nd century ADThe National Archaeological Museum of Athens, Greece F
mythologyofthepoetandthemuse:Of all the classical manifestations of the primordial Great Goddess who
historyarchaeologyartefacts:Two Roman silver cups from a chieftan’s tomb in Roman Iron Age Denmark o
honorthegods:A Roman Feast by Roberto Bompiani (late 1800s)Happy Saturnalia!
met-greekroman-art:Terracotta Banquet Group, Greek and Roman ArtMedium: terracottaPurchase, Patricia
Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, sarcophagus detailRome, July 2015
talesfromweirdland:Costume designs by Jack Kirby for a 1969 performance of Shakespeare’s JULIUS CEAS
Costume designs by Jack Kirby for a 1969 performance of Shakespeare’s JULIUS CEASAR by the Universit
Naples Archaeological MuseumBanquet scene from StabiaeNaples; July 27, 2019
marenostrum-ac-dc:Overview of Opora, Argos and Oinos dining dating to the 3rd century AD. Found in t
lionofchaeronea:Banquet Scene, unknown artist, fresco in the Fourth Style (60-79 CE) from a house in
Perseus and Andromeda in a landscape. Ancient Roman fresco from the Villa of Agrippa Postumus at Bo
A (heavily restored) bust of Julius Caesar (100-44 BCE). Now in the National Archaeological Museum,
The Death of Caesar, Vincenzo Camuccini, 1804-05
Fragment of a wall-painting depicting flowers and a heron, from a Roman villa near Mt. Vesuvius. No
Mithras, identified by the inscription with Sol Invictus (“Unconquered Sun”), slays a bu
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