O348 Cast Stone Relief Panel Depicting Nike Adjusting Her Sandal
O348 Cast Stone Relief Panel Depicting Nike Adjusting Her Sandal
Cast Stone relief panel
Depicting a scene from the Parthenon frieze
‘Nike Adjusting Her Sandal’
From The Temple Of Athena
Early 20th Century
Height 98cm. Width 50cm Depth 18cm
There is a crack running across the centre of the panel but seems stable (please see photographs)
The Parthenon was built as a temple to the Goddess Athena and was centrepiece on the Acropolis of Athens.
The Ionic frieze incorporated into the Doric Parthenon wrapped around the outer, upper walls of the cella – the temple proper. It consisted of 115 blocks that reached a total length of 160 metres and were structural elements of the building. Shown in the reliefs carved on their exterior faces were 378 human and divine figures, as well as more than 220 animals, mostly horses.
The frieze was sculpted between 443 and 438 BC. Its design was the work of the sculptor Pheidias, but its carving was executed by some of his most famous pupils. The frieze’s subject is believed to be the procession of the Greater Panathenaia, the most important festival held in honour of the city’s divine patroness Athena.
The sculpted procession began at the southwest corner of the temple, where it separated into two groups – one moving up the building’s west end and across the long north side; the other, along the south side. They met again in the centre of the east end, the temple’s most formal, main façade, where the new peplos, the garment to be presented to Athena Polias’ statue, was depicted.
Courtesy of Wikipedia