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Detail of a Marble Stele of a Youth and a Little Girl in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 2009

Detail of a Marble Stele of a Youth and a Little Girl in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 2009
Title: Marble stele (grave marker) of a youth and a little girl

Medium; Technique: Marble

Culture: Greek, Attic

Period: Archaic

Date: ca. 530 B.C.

Dimensions: total H. 166 11/16 in. (423.4cm)

Classification: Stone Sculpture

Credit Line: Frederick C. Hewitt Fund, 1911; Rogers Fund, 1921; and Anonymous Gift, 1951

Accession Number: 11.185a–c, f, g

On View


Description:

Inscribed on the base: to dear Me[gakles], on his death, his father with his dear mother set [me] up as a monument.

This is the most complete grave monument of its type to have survived from the Archaic period. Fragments were acquired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1911, 1921, 1936, 1938, and 1951. The fragment with the girl's head, here in a plaster copy, was acquired in 1903 by the Berlin Museum; the fragment with the youth's right forearm, also a plaster cast here, is in the National Museum in Athens. The capital and crowning sphinx are casts of the originals, displayed in a case nearby.

The youth on the shaft is shown as an athlete, with an aryballos (oil flask) suspended from his wrist. Athletics were an important part of every boy's education, and oil was used as a cleanser after exercise. He holds a pomegranate—a fruit associated with both fecundity and death in Greek myths—perhaps indicating that he had reached puberty before his death. The little girl, presumably a younger sister, holds a flower.

This exceptionally lavish monument, which stands over thirteen feet high, must have been erected by one of the wealthiest aristocratic families. Some scholars have restored the name of the youth in the inscription as Megakles, a name associated with the powerful clan of the Alkmeonidai, who opposed the tyrant Peisistratos during most of the second half of the sixth century B.C. The tombs of aristocratic families were sometimes desecrated and destroyed as a result of that conflict, and this stele may well have been among them.

Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/collection_database/greek_...

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