词条 | Lysippus |
释义 | Lysippus Greek sculptor flourished c. 370–c. 300 BC, Sicyon, Greece Greek sculptor, head of the school at Argos and Sicyon in the time of Philip of Macedon (Philip II) and especially active during the reign of Philip's son Alexander the Great (336–323 BC). Lysippus was famous for the new and slender proportions of his figures and for their lifelike naturalism. Originally a worker in metal, he taught himself the art of sculpture by studying nature and the Doryphorus (“Spearbearer”) of Polyclitus, whose canon of ideal male proportions he modified by creating a smaller head and slimmer body that increased his figures' apparent height. ![]() Lysippus' portraits of Alexander the Great are many; he sculpted Alexander from boyhood onward, and Alexander would have no other sculptor portray him. The most noteworthy is the herm (bust on a tapering pedestal) of Alexander in the Louvre, with an ancient inscription attributing it to Lysippus. The bronze statue of Alexander in the Louvre and the head of Alexander in the British Museum are similar in style to the Apoxyomenos. Other key works attributed to Lysippus include the Agias of Pharsalus, a statue of a victor in the pancratium (athletic games for boys); Troilus (an Olympic victor, 372 BC); Coridas (a Pythian victor in the pancratium, 342 BC); the colossal bronze statue of Zeus at Tarentum; the colossal bronze seated Heracles at Tarentum, later sent to Rome and then to the hippodrome at Constantinople (now Istanbul), where it was melted down in 1022; and the chariot of the sun at Rhodes (Apollo on a four-horse chariot). ![]() Additional Reading Franklin P. Johnson, Lysippos (1927, reissued 1968). |
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