Minerva of Arezzo at the National Archaeological Museum, Florence
Minerva of Arezzo at the National Archaeological Museum, Florence
Published 2016-05-17T10:21:41+00:00
Found in a well in an early imperial era residence in arezzo in 1541, this statue of the goddess of war and wisdom entered Cosimo I de’ Medici’s collection of antiquities in 1551 and adorned the duke’s writing desk after 1559. This is a rare Hellenistic variant of a statue of the school of Praxiteles, which can be dated to 340–330 BCE and of which at least twenty-five copies have survived.
This scan originates from Oliver Laric's initiative 'threedscans'. It is part of an ongoing project by Laric, titled 'Versions', which deals with historical and contemporary ideas relating to image hierarchies. Every model produced by Laric is free to be downloaded and used without copyright restrictions. If you use the models please write to stw@myminifactory.com and contact@threedscans.com
Layer Thickness 150 microns. InFill 10%.
Date published | 17/05/2016 |
Benoetigte Zeit | 215 - 230 Minuten |
Menge an Filament | 18 grams |
Dimensionen | 48mm x 25mm x 130mm |
Technologie | FDM |
Title | Minerva of Arezzo |
Period | 300-270 BC |
Medium | Bronze, Copper |
Artist | Attributed to Praxiteles |
Place | the National Archaeological Museum |