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Fragment of a Roman fountain statue: girl with water jar

Date 100–140
Object type sculpture
Medium, technique carved, marble
Dimensions

height: 112 cm, width: 45 cm, depth: 52 cm

Inventory number 4730
Collection Classical Antiquities
On view Museum of Fine Arts, Basement Floor, Classical Antiquity, The ancient Mediterranean

This statue was modelled on Timotheos’ statue, which represented Leda embracing the swan (ca. 375–360).
More than thirty copies of the statue are known from Hellenistic and Roman times (their date varies between the 2nd century BC and the 2nd century AD), most of which closely follow Timotheos’s model. The sculptor of the Budapest piece, however, chose a new path: although in many details he did imitate the statue of Leda, the swan was replaced with a large water jar (now lost). He connected his piece to a water pipe, turning the famous Greek work into a fountain statue. The Leda of Timotheos raised her right hand to cover the swan with her mantle. But the figure of the Budapest statue held the jar with both hands: the representation of myth thus became a genre scene befitting its function. The statue probably stood in a Roman garden.

Marble analyses have shown that the statue was made of Pentelic marble.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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