Apoxyomenos, Roman marble copy of Greek bronze by Lysippus, (credit: Anderson — Alinari/Art Resource, New York)
For more information on Lysippus, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Lysippus |
For more information on Lysippus, visit Britannica.com.
| Art Encyclopedia: Lysippos |
( fl c. 370-c. 300 BC). Greek sculptor. He was the greatest sculptor from the school at Sikyon, then an artistic centre second only to Athens, and ancient sources classed him with Myron of Eleutherai, Pheidias and Polykleitos.
See the Abbreviations for further details.
| Classical Literature Companion: Lȳsippus |
Lȳsippus, of Sicyon, a famous and prolific sculptor, active in the second half of the fourth century BC. Pliny the Elder said he made 1, 500 works—all in bronze—but nothing is known to survive from his own hand. He made many portraits of Alexander the Great (several copies are extant), whose edict, that no one should paint him but Apellēs, and no one make his statue but Lysippus, is well known. One statue showed Alexander in characteristic pose, with head inclined and tilted upwards. An epigrammatist suggested that he was saying ‘I have subdued the earth; you, Zeus, may keep Olympus’.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Lysippos |
| Dictionary: Ly·sip·pus |
, fl. fourth century B.C.| Wikipedia: Lysippos |
Lysippos (Λύσιππος) was a Greek sculptor of the 4th century BC. Together with Scopas and Praxiteles, he is considered one of the three great sculptors of the Classical Greek era, bringing transition into the Hellenistic period. Taken together, his large workshop, the demand for replicas of his work in his lifetime[1] and later among Hellenistic and Roman connoisseurs, the number of disciples directly in his circle,[2] and the survival of his works only in copies all pose methodological problems to the student.
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Lysippos was successor in contemporary repute to the famous sculptor Polykleitos. Among the works attributed to him are the so-called Horses of Saint Mark, Eros Stringing the Bow (of which various copies exist, the best in the British Museum), Agias (known for a marble copy found and preserved in Delphi), the similar Oil Pourer (Dresden and Munich), the Farnese Hercules (which was originally placed in the Baths of Caracalla, although the surviving marble copy lies in the Naples National Archaeological Museum) and Apoxyomenos (or The Scraper, known from a Roman marble copy in the Vatican Museums).
Born at Sicyon around 390 BC Lysippos was a worker in bronze in his youth. He taught himself the art of sculpture, later becoming head of the school of Argos and Sikyon. According to Pliny, he produced more than 1,500 works, all of them in bronze. Commentators noted his grace and elegance, and the symmetria or coherent balance of his figures, which were leaner than the ideal represented by Polykleitos and with proportionately smaller heads, giving them the impression of greater height. He was famous for his attention to the details of eyelids and toenails.
His pupil, Chares of Lindos, constructed the Colossus of Rhodes, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. As this statue does not exist today, debate continues as to whether it was cast bronze or hammered of sheet bronze.
During his lifetime, Lysippos was personal sculptor to Alexander the Great; indeed, he was the only artist whom the conqueror saw fit to represent him. A recently-discovered epigram of Macedonian Poseidippus, in the anthology represented in the Milan Papyrus, takes as its inspiration a bronze portrait of Alexander:
Lysippus has been credited with the stock representation of an inspired, godlike Alexander with tousled hair and lips parted, looking upward.[3] One fine example, an early Imperial Roman copy found at Tivoli, is conserved at the Louvre.
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