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Mythological relief: Bellerophon breaks Pegasos

Date early 2nd century B.C.
Object type relief
Medium, technique carved, marble
Dimensions

34.3 × 37 cm

Inventory number 4775
Collection Classical Antiquities
On view Museum of Fine Arts, Basement Floor, Classical Antiquity, Hellas – Italy – Rome

This fragmentary relief is a masterpiece of Hellenistic art. It captures the height of a battle: Bellerophon springs onto Pegasus and brings him down. The intense, dynamic movements and the exaggerated muscles show that the hero is using all his strength to break the winged horse.
Bellerophon is nude save for his cloak, as is typical for mythical heroes. But his round face is like a portrait, and his head is adorned with a diadem. This is how rulers are usually depicted. The relief thus represents a Hellenistic king as Bellerophon.
The missing right wing of Pegasos was separately carved and joined to the body. Its right foreleg and the right thigh of the hero were masterfully carved in the round, which made them vulnerable to fracture.

Marble analyses have shown that the relief was made of Parian (Paros-Marathi) marble.

This record is subject to revision due to ongoing research.

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