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Statua senza testa di una donna (anche mancando una mano e un braccio), Ostia Antica, 2019.
Sea Nymph by Emil Wolff (1841)
hismarmorealcalm:Athena Lemnia I AD marble Museo Civico Archeologico Bologna Roman copy of a bron
desimonewayland:Table pedestal (trapezophoron) in polychrome marble with two griffins devouring a de
wlwsource:It’s sublime, Cheryl.Thank you, Minerva. Considering so much of my life is sheer ugliness,
Marble throne chairs at the ancient theater of Oropos (Amphiareion archaeological site), Attica, Gre
St.Peter’s Square colonnades, Vatican City
Marble MugsMyGlamMugs
artofthedarkages:A diademed bust of the Byzantine emperor Theodosius II. Carved out of marble. Made
historyfilia:Marble Portrait Bust of a Woman with a Scroll. Byzantine, late 4th–early 5th century.Th
Yana in marble quarry in Tuscany, Italy. Photo: Daniel BauerMore photos of Yana on nakedworldofmars
18.08.04 Nid Marble. Old experiment I found on my hard drive. #progressnotperfection https://www.ins
Ruskeala gap caves, Karelia / Russia (by Vladimir Kirichenko).
Psyche revived by Cupid’s Kiss, Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia (by Archangeli).
Emperor Pertinax A senator who followed Commodus for a brief time period in 193 (January -28 March 1
c18th century marble plaque of Pescennius Niger (Roman Emperor from 193 to 194 AD) and Pertinax (Rom
Portrait of a Roman woman* 1st century BCE* marble* height: 34 cm* Exhibition: Roma Aeterna, Masterp
Panel with a Griffin 1250–1300 Byzantine. Photo by The Metropolitan Museum of Art.Learn more / Daha
Reconstruction of the marble chamber. Piece of the Xanthian Marbles. This collection of “marbl
Marble figurine was found at Tell es-Sawwan, Iraq. Probably, it represents a mother goddess. 6000-58
White marble bust of the syncretized Greco-Egyptian goddess Isis-Sothis-Demeter. Unknown Roman arti
Archaizing marble statue of Isis, Roman, from the Temple of Isis in Pompeii, 1st c. A.D.
A marble statue of the goddess Isis, holding her characteristic instrument, the sistrum (rattle). U
mrmonst3r:Marble head of Athena, Greek, 200 B.C.
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