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The Ludovisi Ares. The sculpture was a sensational find. A small-scale bronze replica of it was executed by G.F. Susini, heir and assistant to his more famous uncle Antonio Susini, when he visited Rome in the 1630s and copied several marbles from Ludovisi's collection; a bronze of the Ludovisi Ares is in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
The Hermes Ludovisi, [1] also formerly known as Mercurio Oratore ("Mercury the Orator"), [2] is a Hellenistic sculpture of the god Hermes in his form of Hermes Psychopompus. It is made of Italic marble and is a somewhat slick [ 3 ] 1st-century AD Roman copy after an inferred bronze original of the 5th century BC which is traditionally ...
The Juno Ludovisi (also called Hera Ludovisi) is a colossal Roman marble head of the 1st century CE from an acrolithic statue of an idealized and youthful [3] Antonia Minor as the goddess Juno. [4] Added to the Ludovisi collection formed by Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi , it is now in the Palazzo Altemps , Museo Nazionale Romano , Rome .
Palazzo Boncompagni Ludovisi, a remaining portion of the villa; Juno Ludovisi, a colossal Roman marble head from a statue of Antonia Minor as the goddess Juno; Ludovisi Dionysus, a Roman work of the 2nd century CE, first displayed in front of the Palazzo Grande, at the Villa Ludovisi; Ludovisi Ares, an Antonine Roman marble sculpture of Mars
Ludovisi Ares: National Museum of Rome, Rome 1622 Sculpture Marble Restoration 11(3) [12] Bust of Pope Gregory XV: Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto 1621 Sculpture Marble Height 64 cm (25 in) 12 [13] Bust of Monsignor Pedro de Foix Montoya: Santa Maria di Monserrato, Rome 1621 Sculpture Marble Life-size 13 [14] Bust of Cardinal Escoubleau de Sourdis
Ludovisi Ares; Ludovisi Dionysus; Ludovisi Gaul; Ludovisi Battle sarcophagus; Ludovisi Throne This page was last edited on 26 August 2024, at 00:47 (UTC). Text is ...
Works by Scopas are preserved in the British Museum (reliefs) in London; fragments from the temple of Athena Alea at Tegea in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens; the celebrated Ludovisi Ares in the Palazzo Altemps, Rome; a statue of Pothos restored as Apollo Citharoedus in the Capitoline Museum, Rome; and his statue of Meleager ...
From about 1620 Buzzi was virtually the house restorer for Cardinal Ludovisi, [4] who possessed in his villa on the Quirinale one of the finest collections of Roman sculptures in Rome, [5] and commissioned repairs from Gian Lorenzo Bernini—whose minor restorations to the Ludovisi Ares are discreet—and Alessandro Algardi, who supported himself with restoration work, as well as Buzzi.