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Mycenaean ivory pyxis depicting griffins attacking stags. Artist unknown; late 15th cent. BCE. Now
Nihâl Chand - Radha and Krishna in the Boat of Love - 1755, National Museum, New Delhi
William Andrew Pogany (1882-1955), “Everyday Classics - Fifth Reader” byFranklin Thomas
Funerary portrait of a woman from Roman Egypt. Artist unknown; ca. 138-192 CE (Antonine period). F
Mummy portrait of a girl, from Roman Egypt. Artist unknown; ca. 120-150 CE. Now in the Liebieghaus
Mummy portrait of a man from the Fayum, Roman Egypt. Artist unknown; 2nd or 3rd cent. CE. Now in t
summertime-renee:More Hera stuff! I got the pleasure to animate Zeus flirting with nymphs. The nymph
saintjoan:When we un-packed it, the Paris curator was embarrassed to discover lipstick marks on its
Todoroki wins combat ( MHA 90s style )
“Class warfare is at hand” Seen in San Antonio, Texas
classichorrorblog:EquinoxDirected by Jack Woods and Dennis Muren (1970)
The head of the Roman Emperor Caracalla (Marcus Aurelius Severus Augustus Antoninus; r. 198-211 [joi
classichorrorblog:BeetlejuiceDirected by Tim Burton (1988)
Limestone head from the statue of a worshiper of Apollo, bearded and wearing a helmet with upturned
Ancient Greek limestone statuette of a young male votary holding a pyxis (cylindrical vessel with li
Ancient Greek limestone statuette of a male votary. Artist unknown; 6th cent. BCE. From Cyprus; no
The mortal Peleus “courts” the sea-nymph Thetis by seizing her, while she shape-shifts i
Peleus entrusts his young son Achilles to the care of the centaur Chiron. White-ground black-figure
Gaetano Zompini (1700–1778)The centaur Chiron teaches the boy Achilles in geography, 1759
The Education of Achilles, James Barry, ca. 1772
The centaur Chiron, accompanied by a satyr. Side A of a red-figure bell-krater attributed to the pa
Apollo (left) and his son Asclepius (seated), with the wise centaur Chiron, Asclepius’ tutor,
Romano-British vase in the shape of a man’s head, perhaps representing the Roman Emperor Caracalla (
The so-called “Colchester Vase,” depicting four gladiators named by inscriptions as Secundus, Mario,
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