Stele of Aristion
The Stele of Aristion or the Marathon Stele is a funerary stele in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens (NAMA, inventory number 29) which dates from around 510 BC. The work is among the best sculptures from late Archaic Greece.
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The sculpture was discovered in Velanideza in Attica in 1839. It is made of Pentelic marble and measures 2.02 m high. The stele was found with its base, which is 0.24 m high. The uppermost portion of the head and helmet is missing. At the top of the base is an inscription, giving the name of the deceased in the genitive: [1] Ἀριστίονος "Aristion's". Aristion is depicted as a bearded hoplite soldier in profile, facing right. He wears a short, thin chiton under a corselet. This was originally decorated with painted designs: Meanders, zig-zags, and a star on his shoulder. The rest of the statue was also extensively decorated with paint - traces of red, yellow, and blue paint still survive. Aristion also wears an Attic helmet and greaves. His right arm hangs at his side, his left hand holds a spear. Some details are especially well-worked, like the wavy beard, the hair, and the musculature of the arms, legs and chest.
In the empty space under his feet there is a horizontal inscribed band, which names the sculptor of the stele: ἔργον Ἀριστοκλέος "Work of Aristokles."[2]
References
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- ↑ Inscriptiones Graecae (IG) I³ 1256; Image of the inscription.
- ↑ Probably not to be identified with either of the sculptors of that name known from the ancient literary tradition
Bibliography
- Nikolaos Kaltsas: Sculpture in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 2002, ISBN 0-89236-686-9, p. 70.