LOT 0920 Roman Greeting Cupid Statuette
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2nd-3rd century AD. A bronze statuette depicting a naked winged Cupid in a dynamic pose, right arm raised up in a greeting gesture, left arm brought to the chin, legs apart, with the right leg extended in a dynamic movement; head with well-sculpted facial details, curly hair covering the ears, a top-knot sits on his head, the statuette may have formed part of a larger group centred around a statuette of Venus; mounted on a custom-made stand. See Stead, I., Excavations at Winterton Roman Villa and other Roman Sites in North Lincolnshire. Department of the Environment Archaeological Reports 9 in HMSO, 1976, for similar specimens. 156 grams total, 90mm (3 1/2"). Acquired at Bonhams, New Bond Street, 28 Nov 2018, lot 67 [part]; formerly from the collection of Mr & Mrs Adie, Warwickshire, UK; acquired between 1965-1980; thence by descent. Cupid (Eros for the Greeks) was the god of mighty love, the overwhelming force that pushes and attracts men and women. The Greeks depicted Eros as a young man of beautiful appearance, naked, often armed with a bow and arrows with which he pierced the hearts of mortals and gods with love. According to tradition, Eros was taken by his mother, Aphrodite, before the gods: Zeus immediately understood what and how much damage the divine boy would cause, and advised Aphrodite to suppress him. The goddess could not obey, and instead hid the baby in a wood, where he survived by feeding on the milk of wild beasts. He was still very young when he first crafted a bow and arrows, practising until he became an infallible archer.
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