Roman copy of an original from the 4th century B.C. The original statue, in marble of Paros, comes from the Villa Borghese in Rome and belongs to the Louvre Museum (Paris).
The original white marble sculpture was made around the year 135 A.D. and belongs to the Prado Museum (Madrid). It comes from the Roman ruins of Sagunto and was restored during the Renaissance by an individual called B. Rovira (the inscription of his name figure by the date of 1533), who sculpted a shell on the pubis and the inscription "Praxiteles's work".
Roman copy of an original from the middle of the 2nd century B.C. The original sculpture in marble was made in the second half of the 1st century A.D. and belongs to the Prado Museum (Madrid).
Antonio Canova's original sculpture, in marble, was made around 1805 to replace the Medici's Venus stolen and taken to France in 1802. This sculpture is known as Venus Italica or Canova's Venus. It belongs to the Palatine Gallery in Florence.
Roman copy of a Greek original from the 450 B.C. The original statue, in marble, comes from the Towley collection and is a Roman forgery of the work of Miron copy, for the head of this goes in the opposite direction to the original. The original sculpture belongs to the British Museum in London.
The original sculpture, in white marble, was made around the year 135 A.D. and belongs to the Prado Museum (Madrid). It comes from the Roman ruins of Sagunto and was restored during the Renaissance by an individual called B. Rovira (the inscription of his name figure by the date of 1533), who sculpted a shell on the pubis and the inscription "Praxiteles's...
The original sculpture in marble was made in the 5th century B.C. and belongs to the British Museum in London. It was discovered in Civita Lavinia, current Lanuvio (Italy) in the 19th century.
Copy of an original from the 4th century B.C. The original torso, in marble of Paros, was discovered by the Scottish painter G. Hamilton in Centocelle (Rome). Later it was acquired by the Pope Clement XIV. It belongs to the Vatican Museum.
The original sculpture was sculpted in marble at the end of the 18th century, after a model in terracotta of Charles-Antoine Bridan (1730-1805) of 1784 exhibited at the Musée des Beaux-Arts of Chartres. At the same time, it is a copy of an ancient Roman sculpture of the Villa Borghese (Rome). The statue belongs to the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San...
The original sculpture was sculpted in marble at the end of the 18th century, after a model in terracotta of Charles-Antoine Bridan (1730-1805) of 1784 exhibited at the Musée des Beaux-Arts of Chartres. At the same time, it is a copy of an ancient Roman sculpture of the Villa Borghese (Rome). The statue belongs to the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San...
Roman copy of a Greek original from the 4th century B.C. (c. 330 B.C.). The original work, in marble of Paros, was discovered in 1792 at the ruins of Gabies, in northern of Italy. It belonged to the Borghese collection until 1807, when it was acquired by Napoleon. Nowadays it belongs to the Louvre Museum (Paris).