Vases Statue of a Crouching Venus
Statue of a Crouching Venus

Statue of a Crouching Venus

A.D. 100–150
Statue of a crouching Venus accompanied by Cupid and a swan. Venus is missing the right arm below her shoulder, left forearm and foot, and part of the right foot. She is nude except for a serpent-like helixes (armlet) worn on her left arm. She leans forward, her arms crossed in front of her, left elbow braced on her left leg. She supports herself on the toes of her right foot, her leg bent such that she sits on her heel. Her head is turned sharply to her right. The figure of Cupid, standing behind her and to the right, is missing his head, left leg, and lower right leg. He clings tightly to Venus, his left hand stretched up along her back, the right extended forward around her right hip. The swan, compressed beneath the statue's left side, is likely a support. The statue is modelled after the Crouching Aphrodite type, attributed to the 3rd century B.C. sculptor Doidalsas of Bithynia. The marble is grey in color.
Date
A.D. 100–150
Culture
Roman
Dimensions
H: 115.00 cm W: 56.70 cm
Medium
Marble
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
55.AA.10
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)