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Cast of the Borghese Gladiator; Discobolus; Fighting Gladiator; Hector; Héros Combattant; Borghese Warrior; Original in Musée du Louvre, Paris; Warrior of Agasias

Original attributed to Agasias of Ephesus19th-century plaster cast, made from 1st-century BC sculpture

Royal Academy of Arts

Royal Academy of Arts
London, United Kingdom

This is a plaster cast made from a marble statue found near Anzio, Italy in 1611. The identification of the statue as a gladiator was made in the 17th century, and is still broadly accepted. The original was in the Borghese collection by 1613 (hence the name by which it is commonly known, the Borghese Gladiator), and was the most admired of all the ancient sculptures in the collection. Napoleon Bonaparte purchased it (and a substantial part of the Borghese collection) in 1807, and from Napoleon’s collection it entered the Louvre.

In 1629-30 the sculptor Hubert le Sueur made a bronze cast of the statue for Charles I’s Royal Collection, which was placed in the Privy Garden at St. James’ Palace. This made the sculpture well-known in England, and by 1645 another cast was in the gardens at Wilton (and later Houghton). In the 18th and 19th centuries additional casts were in Woburn Abbey (cast by Richard Westmacott, 1827), and Knole. In the late 18th century the painter Anton Raphael Mengs, whose preference was for naturalistic execution and anatomical correctness, ranked the Borghese Gladiator above all other antique sculpture.

A plaster cast of the Borghese Gladiator was at the Royal Academy by 1795, the year Henry Singleton painted it in his group portrait The Royal Academicians in General Assembly. Another cast of the sculpture can be seen in Charles-Joseph Natoire’s 1746 view of the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture in Paris.

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  • Title: Cast of the Borghese Gladiator; Discobolus; Fighting Gladiator; Hector; Héros Combattant; Borghese Warrior; Original in Musée du Louvre, Paris; Warrior of Agasias
  • Creator: Original attributed to Agasias of Ephesus
  • Date Created: 19th-century plaster cast, made from 1st-century BC sculpture
  • Type: Sculpture cast
  • Rights: Photo credit: © Royal Academy of Arts, London; photographer: Paul Highnam
  • Medium: Plaster cast
  • Royal Academy Picture Library number: PL000940
  • Physical dimensions: Height: 163 cm
Royal Academy of Arts

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