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Museo Civico Archeologico
Via dell'Archiginnasio 2 - 40124 Bologna
Tel. 051.27.57.211
Direzione e Uffici
Via de' Musei 8 – 40124 Bologna
Tel. 051.27.57.211 - Fax 051.26.65.16
mca@comune.bologna.it
The masterpiece of the Palagi Collection is the head of Athena in pentelic marble, a roman copy of the lost bronze sculpture of the goddess, commissioned to Phidias, between 451 and 447 BC, by a group of Athenian citizens on the verge to found a colony on the aegean island of Lemnos.
The statue, called for this reason "Lemnia", was placed on the Acropolis of Athens with the function of ex-voto, to achieve the protection of the goddess, "patron" of the city, during the creation of the new colony.
Phidias depicted the goddess – usually portrayed bearing weapons and ready for battle – in a peaceful pose, dressed in a tunic and mantle; she is leaning on her lance and is holding her helmet in her right hand. The statue, the pacific symbol of the supremacy of thought that fully interpreted the spirit of Periclean Athens, enjoyed enormous fame in antiquity and was admired for its message and beauty.
The bronze original has been lost, but its appearance has been reconstructed based on several replicas from the Roman period. This copy, attributed to a Greek sculptor active in the age of Augustus (late 1st century BC–early 1st century AD), seems to reflect Phidias’ original quite faithfully and is unquestionably the finest extant copy, renowned for its beauty and artistic quality
Provenance: Palagi Collection
Datation: Late 1st century BC–early 1st century AD
Material: Marble
Dimensions: height cm 43
Inventory #: G 1060