Portrait of Euripides
Portrait of Euripides
Published 2017-03-30T12:50:09+00:00
This portrait of Euripides is a cast of the Roman marble copy of the greek original and comes from The National Museum of Naples.
Euripides is one of the three Athenian tragedians whose works we possess in more than fragments; indeed, the surviving plays of Euripides outnumber those of Aeschylus and Sophocles combined (seven each compared with Euripides’ eighteen, or if we count the probably spurious Rhesus, nineteen). Some of this is due to chance, but Euripides was the most performed, most read, most widely admired tragedian of the later Greco-Roman world, and arguably the most influential on later drama. From the evidence available for comparative judgments (admittedly sparse), his works appear to have offered the greatest range of moods and tones, provided the most unsettling perspectives, and engendered the greatest controversy. Euripidean drama still challenges theatergoers, readers, and critics alike.
Date published | 30/03/2017 |
Title | Portrait of Euripides |
Date | IV century BC (original) |
Dimension | Life-size |
Period | Democratic Athene/Golden Age Greek Art |
Medium | Cast of the Roman marble copy of the greek original |
Artist | Unknown artist |
Place | Russian Academy |