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Nike Of Samothrace Sculpture (Αντιγραφή) - ArtCulture art culture interior design sculpture gift

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Nike Of Samothrace Sculpture (Αντιγραφή)

68,00 

1 in stock (can be backordered)

68,00 

Immediately available for order

Excellent decoration in modern color combinations. Made of alabaster and hand-painted with vivid colors, for durability and durability respectively, on a patinated wooden base with a special felt lining at the bottom for comfortable soft support on any furniture of your home or office. Choose it as an ideal luxury gift or add it to your collection. Get inspired, create and decorate the space you want by choosing the unique ArtCulture products.

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Title IconCERTIFICATION
Title IconGREEK PRODUCTS
Title IconHAND PAINT
Title IconNON PREMIUM PACKAGE
Title IconPREMIUM PACKAGE
Title IconSHIPPING
Title IconCERAMIC
Title IconALABASTER
Title IconCANDLE
Title IconWHITE STONE
Title IconGLASS

Description

The Victory of Samothrace is a marble sculpture of an unknown artist of the Hellenistic era that was found in the sanctuary of the Great Gods in Samothrace and represents the winged Goddess Nike. The statue is 3.28 m high (with wings) and 5.58 m with the marble bow of the ship on which it is placed today. It was made to honor the goddess Nike but also a naval battle – it is not certain which one. It was dedicated to a temple of Samothrace and dates between 220 and 190 BC. – most estimates converge in 190 BC. The sculpture has been on display at the Louvre Museum since 1884. It is one of the three winged Victories found in the Temple of Samothrace. The other two exhibit the first, a Roman copy found by Austrian archaeologists at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, and the second, found by the American delegation of Karl Lehmann and Phyllis Williams-Lehmann in 1949, at the Archaeological Museum. Samothrace. Lehmann and his wife later found (in 1950) excavations and parts of the statue’s right hand. A few months later, the same pair of archaeologists found the fingers of the right hand of the same Nike in the aforementioned Austrian museum, which had them unregistered and did not know that they belonged to her. Her right palm was reconstituted revealing that she did not hold a trumpet as many had believed until then and is also on display at the Louvre, in a separate window near the statue.

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