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Exhibition: Who Needs Colour . . . : original paintings, drawings and prints by Picasso, Matisse, Chagall, Hockney, Riley, Haring, Hirst and Banksy for sale

Current exhibition
4 June - 5 July 2025
Antiquity, Torso of a Male, 1st-2nd century A.D.
Antiquity
Torso of a Male, 1st-2nd century A.D.
Marble
22 x 9 x 8 in
56 x 23 x 20 cm
please enquire for price
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Adopting a refined, contrapposto pose with his weight bearing down on his right leg, this exquisite torso probably belongs to a heroic athlete or warrior. A slightly twisted shoulder and softly modelled body highlight the subtly of the carver’s skill, while the pose suggests their deep-rooted knowledge of the principles of Classical art. The model for such Roman marble sculptures often derived from now lost 5th and 6th century B.C. Greek originals, cast in bronze. By the time of this statue’s creation during the Imperial Period of ancient Rome, sometime between the 1st and 2nd century A.D., there was a vogue for all things Greek in both art and culture. The skill of ancient Greek sculptors was especially not lost on the Roman elite, and as D.E.E Kleiner explains ‘They were introduced by the Greeks to art… by the abundant display of plundered Greek masterworks in the Roman triumphal processions. After the supply of originals dwindled, whole schools of copyists began turning out near replicas and new variations to fulfil the demands of a seemingly insatiable Roman audience.’ With a tunic draped over his left shoulder, possibly denoting a chiton (an ancient Greek form of clothing), this figure cuts a remarkable posture, typically associated with the Oil Pourer (c.340-330 B.C.), a now lost ancient Greek bronze sculpture associated with the artist Lysippos which is known through extant Roman copies. The male’s stance also suggests an air of quiet repose – essential to the cultivated mind working harmoniously with the cultivated body in ancient Rome. Statues such as this most commonly survive in torso form (sometimes with 18th and 19th century spurious repairs and additions) due to weak points of the carving being situated where the limbs and head join the body. The roughness of the carving on the figures reverse suggests the sculptor has been economical with his work – perhaps a sign it was commissioned to stand within a niche and not viewed in the round. Both the Metropolitan Museum in New York and the British Museum in London (which respectively hold two of the world’s most important collections of Classical sculpture) have parallel examples of carved Roman marble torsos. Like ours, they are missing their arms, legs and heads, but the evocative musculature, supple carving and confident poses all illustrate the immense adroitness of each statue’s carver’s craft – and a high point of Roman art.
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Provenance

Roman Provenance: London Art market, 1996
David Aaron, London 2018
Art Loss Registry certificate: S00131591

Literature

Compare to:
Roman marble male torso, with one arm raised, 1859,0402.61, 1st-2nd century A.D. H: 62 cm. 19.192.85.

Roman marble male torso, with one arm raised. British Museum, London, 100-160 A.D., excavated in Carthage, H: 28 cm. 1859,0402.61
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