Métope grecque en terre-cuite, Thétis chevauchant un Néréide
Ce petit bas-relief moulé en terre-cuite est très problablement une métope, c'est-à-dire un élément d'architrave dans l'architecture dorique et présente une scène de Iliade. La figure féminine drapée peut être identifiée comme Thétis, la déesse-nymphe, mère du héros Achille. Assise sur le dos d'un néréide, monstre marin, elle apporte au héros son armure, forgée par le dieu Hephaistos. Manques visibles à la partie supérieure. Erosion visible, traces de polychromie.
Composition : Terre-Cuite, restes d'engobe
Origine : Grèce
Provenance : Marché de l'art britannique
Période : IV ème s. avant J.C.
Dimensions : L. : 20 cm - H. : 17 cm
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IV c BC Greek Metope - Thetis Carrying Achilles' Armor On A Nereid
Large terracotta moulded piece, most probably a metope - or part of figurative architrave of a building, with a scene from the Iliad. The scene can be identified as the nymph-goddess Thethis, Achilles' mother, carrying back the Hero's weapons on the back of a Nereid - or sea monster. Thetis was the mother of Achilles, the greatest of all the Greek warrior-heroes, and this scene shows her taking a magical shield and suit of armour to her son from the god-blacksmith Hephaistos in order to protect the ill-fated warrior in the Trojan War. Though Thetis had tried to stop her son joining the war, he had come to Troy with Odysseus and had up to this point refused to fight. But the death of his friend Patrokles forced Achilles to take up his arms and wreak revenge, thus turning the axis of the war to the advantage of the Greeks. When Achilles was eventually killed by Paris, Thetis came from the sea with the Nereids to mourn him and collected his ashes in a golden urn. Upper portion lost, general wear as shown in the picture.
Material : Terracotta with engoba
Dimensions : L : 20 cm - H. : 17 cm
Provenance : Ex. British art market
Origin : Greece