Scopas: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
ClueBot (talk | contribs)
m Reverting possible vandalism by 65.64.223.6 to version by Catalographer. False positive? Report it. Thanks, ClueBot. (809310) (Bot)
No edit summary
Tag: repeating characters
Line 16: Line 16:


{{sculptor-stub}}
{{sculptor-stub}}
Gimme that good monkey !!! :D let me stick it in u realll deep make u screammmmmmm!!!

[[bg:Скопас]]
[[bg:Скопас]]
[[ca:Escopes de Paros]]
[[ca:Escopes de Paros]]

Revision as of 20:02, 30 October 2009

Roman marble head of Meleager, after Scopas, on a restored bust (British Museum).
This article is about the ancient sculptor. For the ancient writer whose name appears in some manuscripts as "Scopas", see Agriopas.

Scopas or Skopas (Ancient Greek: Σκόπας; c. 395 BC-350 BC) was an Ancient Greek sculptor and architect, born on the island of Paros. Scopas worked with Praxiteles, he sculpted parts of the Mausoleum of Halicarnassus, especially the reliefs. He led the building of the new temple of Athena Alea at Tegea. Similar to Lysippus, Scopas is in his art a successor of the Classical Greek sculptor Polyclitus. The faces of the heads almost in quadrat with deeply sunken eyes and a slightly opened mouth are specific characters in the figures of Scopas.

Works after Scopas are preserved in the British Museum (reliefs) in London; fragments from the temple of Athena Alea at Tegea in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens; the celebrated Ludovisi Ares in the Palazzo Altemps, Rome; a statue of Pothos restored as Apollo Citharoedus in the Capitoline Museum, Rome; and a statue of Meleager, perhaps best represented by a torso in the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Literature

  • Andreas Linfert: Von Polyklet zu Lysipp. Polyklets Schule und ihr Verhältnis zu Skopas v. Paros. Diss. Freiburg i. B. 1965.
  • Andrew F. Stewart: Skopas of Paros. Noyes Pr., Park Ridge, N.Y. 1977. ISBN 0-8155-5051-0
  • Andrew Stewart: Skopas in Malibu. The head of Achilles from Tegea and other sculptures by Skopas in the J. Paul Getty Museum J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, Calif. 1982. ISBN 0-89236-036-4

Gimme that good monkey !!! :D let me stick it in u realll deep make u screammmmmmm!!!