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Man Leading a Ram by the Horn

Unidentified Artistlate 8th century BCE - early 7th century BCE

Harvard Art Museums

Harvard Art Museums
Cambridge, United States

A small sturdy ram appears to resist the efforts of a determined nude man standing beside him to lead or guide him forward, perhaps to sacrifice. Groups such as this are very rare in Geometric bronze sculpture and foreshadow the production of larger and more complicated sculptural compositions in bronze and stone during centuries to come. The presence of an iron pin piercing the plinth and extending into the ram's underside suggests that this charming group may originally have been attached to the top of a staff or sceptre. While the identity of the man remains uncertain, it is tempting to think of him as Hermes, the messenger god who sponsored trade and cared for flocks. Similar groups have been found at Delphi and at Selinus in Sicily. The man's expressive, large hands convey his effort to make the animal move.


David Gordon Mitten

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  • Title: Man Leading a Ram by the Horn
  • Creator: Unidentified Artist
  • Creator Lifespan: 1/1
  • Date: late 8th century BCE - early 7th century BCE
  • Technique: Cast, lost-wax process
  • Physical Dimensions: w5.4 x h6.6 x d3.4 cm (overall)
  • Period: Geometric period to Orientalizing
  • Credit Line: Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, David M. Robinson Fund
  • Creation Place: Europe/Ancient & Byzantine World
  • Type: Sculpture
  • External Link: Harvard Art Museums
  • Medium: Bronze, traces of iron rod in base
Harvard Art Museums

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