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By Phillip Chauncey.
missycvnt: i wanna be a Greek goddess statue
elwicho: Bronze statue of Antinous, favorite and lover of the Roman emperor Hadrian. He was deified after his death, being worshiped in both the Greek East and Latin West.
hellasinhabitants: Bronze Statue of Poseidon, Greek God of the Sea photograph by Gjon Mili.
ancientart: Detail of Statue of Eirene, Greek goddess of Peace. Roman copy of a famous greece bronze figure by Cephisodotus (the elder), which is lost. Eirene is carrying Plutus, the god of plenty. Currently located at the Glyptothek Museum in Munich,
ancientart: Antinous Farnese, Statue of Antinous. Reelaboration of the 2nd century AD after a Greek original of the Late Classical period, made of marble. Courtesy & currently located at the Naples National Archaeological Museum, Italy. Photo taken
temple-of-the-almighty-priapus: Wow…that’s a gorgeous and glorious erection!! Rock-hard like a granite statue of a naked, Greek-god.
“King Midas” by Tatiana Vetrova on ArtStation.
creepy-mcnightmare:ITS 👏🏼 OKAY 👏🏼 FOR 👏🏼 DUDES 👏🏼 TO 👏🏼 BE 👏🏼SOFT 👏🏼 AND 👏🏼 SQUISHY! WE 👏🏼 DONT 👏🏼 ALL 👏🏼 LOOK 👏🏼 LIKE 👏🏼 STATUES 👏🏼 OF 👏🏼 GREEK 👏🏼 GODS 👏🏼
salomi:Venus d'ArlesThe Venus of Arles, discovered in several pieces in the Roman theatre at Arles. The statue dates to the end of the 1st century BCE after a Greek original c. 365 BC by famous Praxiteles.- Louvre Museum, Paris.
babinus: The Venus Kallipygos in the National Archaeological Museum in Naples, a late 1st century BC Roman marble statue, thought to be a copy of a Greek bronze from around 300 BC.
ancientart: Hera Farnese. Statue of Hera (of the Ephesus-Vienna type), the wife and one of three sisters of Zeus, and the goddess of women and marriage. Roman copy of the Imperial era after a Greek Classical original. 1st century AD, the original dates
sw087: mathmaticalkrillbits: emo-otaku: Someone remind me to never be a mythology nerd and read stuff about Greek Gods because I just saw a statue of the god Pan fucking a goat. I guess he was feeling a little.. Horny shhhhhhh! Do you want Zeus
ancientart:The ancient Greek Erechtheum on the Athenian Acropolis, 421-406 BC. In the southwestern corner of the Erechtheum is the famous ‘Porch of the Maidens’ (photo 1), where statues of six young girls take the place of supporting columns.
art4gays: amare-habeo: Gilded Bronze statue of a beardless Hercules cast in the Greek Lysippic style of the 4th century BCE Found in the remains of the Forum Boariu via Mary Harrsch & desimonewayland (via TumbleOn)
sour-blue: Cooper Thompson has a very distinctive look, like the lovechild of a porcelain doll and a Greek god statue.
gaia-is-beautiful: Statue of Apollo ancient Greek god, Athens, Greece by KostasBrillakis See the artist’s work at http://ift.tt/1Lvz5n4 Photo by K. Brillakis
ancientpeoples: Bronze statue of Eros sleeping Greek (said to have been found on Rhodes), Hellenistic period, 3rd–2nd century B.C. The Hellenistic period introduced the accurate characterization of age. Young children enjoyed great favor, whether
historyarchaeologyartefacts:Diver excavates a large statue from the sunken city of Thonis-Heracleion, a port city known by both its Egyptian and Greek names. Before the founding of Alexandria, it served as one of the chief ports in Egypt. Probably founded
haviverzes: Anthropomorphic stone stelae or statue menhirs from Tyritáke, an ancient Greek town of the Bosporan Kingdom, situated in the eastern part of Crimea.
PAN - Detailed charcoal drawing of Pan, patterned after the Hellenistic Greek Marble statue in the Naples National Archaeological Museum, in Naples, Italy. Art by - P. Brad Parker.
militaryarmament: A Greek soldier resting upon the statue of King Leonidas during the National Holiday. 25th March, 2015 in Sparta, Laconia, Greece.
cyberjock: According to marble statues at the museum, I’ve got a bigger dick than Greek gods.
meditations-poetiques: Antoine Coysevox, 1640-1720 Nymph with a shell. Marble, 1685. Variation after Ma 18, a Roman statue then in the Borghese collection, now exhibited in the Department of Greek, Etruscan and Roman antiquities in the Louvre—which
officialgrace1d: Wouldn’t it be awkward if you were the daughter/son of a Greek god/goddess and you were at a museum and you saw the statues of them and they’re all naked and you’re just sitting there like “yep. That’s my parent”
hismarmorealcalm: Archaeological Museum of Piraeus Statue of a young athlete - perhaps funerary (circa 4th century B.C.) via greek-museums
ganymedesrocks: A 1st century CE Roman copy of a 5th century BCE Statue of an Ephebe (Young Man) Greek original, found in the Augustus Felix surbanus, Pompeii, Italy bronze with silver cladding and glass paste eyes
boysnmenart: Statue of Meleager. Roman copy of a 4th-century BC Greek original. Early to Middle Imperial period. Etruria Parian marble
ultrawolvesunderthefullmoon: Artist Unknown, Greek Marble Statue of Male Nude, Louvre Museum, France
retro-gay: Statues of Harmodius and Aristogeiton - Lovers and tyrannicides who helped establish democracy in Athens.Roman copies of Greek originals
seducingeros: Detail of bronze statue of Hercules Gilded bronze. 2nd century B.C. Roman, based on Greek models from the 4th century B.C. Height: 2.41 m (7 ft. 10 ¾ in.). Found in the Forum Boarium, Rome, 15th century. Palazzo dei Conservatori, Capitoline
ganymedesrocks: Statue of Theseus, Slayer of the Minotaur and King of Athens, Greece. Theseus was a founding hero, considered by Athenians as their own great reformer: his name comes from the same root as “thesmos”, Greek for “The Gathering”.
marmarinos: Roman statue of a youth, known as the “Dresdner Knabe,” c. early 1st century CE. Marble.Roman copy of (likely) a Greek original, which dated to c. 420 BCE.
marmarinos: Greek or Roman statue of Alexander the Great, dated to the 2nd century BCE. Marble. Currently located in the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.
ganymedesrocks: Orpheic Muse, this glass-eyed bronze statue of Apollo, Greek god of the arts
static-people: Bronze Statue of a Man. ca. mid 2nd-1st century BCE. Greek
ganymedesrocks: Statue of a prince without crown thought to be a Seleucid prince maybe Attalus II of Pergamon. A Bronze Greek artwork of the Hellenistic era. 3rd-2nd centuries BC.
tivoli2: Victorious athlete in the British Museum, London. Marble statue of an athlete tying a ribbon around his head, 1st century AD. Roman copy of a greek original ca. 440 BC. Photo by Tivoli tivoli2.tumblr.com
art4gays: ganymedesrocks: Musings on Grecian Aesthetics: From the Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibited Terracotta statuette of the Diadoumenos – a Copy of a Greek bronze statue of circa 430 BC by Polykleitos to this very contemporary picture attesting
panasfaidon: Bronze Statue of an Athlete (Roman copy after the Greek original ) National Archaeological Museum – Naples, Italy
ganymedesrocks: Anadoumenos - First century BC The ribbon-wearer head of an athlete wearing a “taenia”; the head was originally part of a full-length statue but was added to a modern bust by its restorer. The head is either modeled on a Greek original
salomi:Kassel Apollo Copy of the bronze Greek original statue attributed to Kalamis or Phidias about 470 – 460 BC.- Museum Of Classical Art Sapienza University, Rome.
hadrian6:The Archer. circa 1930. This Art Deco-era statue crafted of patinated bronze captures an archer bending his bow. The figure is rendered with an impressive tension and energy. The nude athlete inspired by the Greek sculpture, has an arm bending
salomi:Statue of HermesMarble (probably from the Greek island of Paros), Roman Imperial Period 30–40 AD.An under life size nude; the wings in his hair, now broken off, indicate he is Mercury (Hermes), the messenger of the gods and conductor of souls
antonio-m: Statue of a prince or dynast without crown. Bronze, Greek artwork of the Hellenistic era, 3rd-2nd centuries BC. (Look at the beard, subtly engraved using a burin). Museo nazionale romano di palazzo MassimoRepost from @yamunaontheroad
langoaurelian: Torso of Apollo, c. 100-200, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman ArtThis ancient statue depicts the mythical god Apollo, identified by the fragmented remains of his kithara, a stringed instrument used by poets and musicians in ancient
ganymedesrocks: Hermes, a 1st or 2nd century, Roman Pentellic Marble Statue, after the Classical Greek Original, dating to the late 5th or early 4th century BC, which is attributed to Polykleitos - Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, NY, USA.
ganymedesrocks: The Diadoumenos, the ‘Victor’ ribbon wearer, a First century BC terracotta copy of a Polykleitos Greek bronze statue of ca. 430 BC., The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
runawaydevill:Marble statue in Berlin of the ancient Greek god, Hermes (Roman: Mercury) and the beautiful Psyche (Reinhold Begas -1878)
toplovesbodybuildersdomains: crazylife6: Series of knobs in pants 8 The right aesthetics proportions for a big muscular man is to have a tiny dick. The big dichotomy makes him look very sexy. This is how Hercules looked in the Greek/Roman statues.
tdwhisperer: iprayforangels: carslayraeoflightlegendsen: eggsywin: Fun fact y’all, the reason why so many Ancient Greek and Roman statues have tiny genitalia was because large ones were associated with stupidity, ugliness, and foolishness. Smaller
gluten-free-pussy: yassmines: mementomoriiv: Baubo, Greek Goddess of Mirth me too bich This statue has the same energy as this photo
toplovesbodybuildersdomains: The right aesthetics proportions for a big muscular man is to have a tiny dick. The big dichotomy makes him look very sexy. This is how Hercules looked in the Greek/Roman statues. But this is a fact of life, big muscular
in-quo-totum-continetur: a-l-ancien-regime: Statue of Asclepius / The park Atrium of the Caserta palace, Caserta, Italy. / Asclepius was the son of Apollo, and the god of medicine in ancient Greek religion, representing the healing aspects of the medical
torooo-y-meow:augutsy:fuckers acting like selfies are “unhealthy” and “self-absorbed” when old ass generations sat and got their selfies painted for hours by talented artists ANCIENT EGYPTIANS MADE SOLID GOLD STATUES OF THEMSELVES. ANCIENT GREEKS/ROMANS
byronofrochdale: Machaon and Podaleirios, physicians of the Greek Army during the Trojan war, sons of Asklepios.I can’t recall having seen another statue of these guys before, but they are among my favourite carachters in the Iliad and I love the fact