The sea god’s retinue occupies the west side of the northern wing of the Altar […]. His son, Triton – a fantastical creature with a sea snake tail, horse body, and human torso – joins his mother Amphitrite, while her father Nereus appears on the frieze facing the staircase. Clothed in a long chiton, doubled mantle, and fish-skin cap, Nereus fights beside his sea-nymph consort Doris. She too wears a long robe, as well as fish-skin boots. She steps on the snake leg of a Giant in order to better pull back his head to deliver the death blow. In front of her is the muscular bearded figure of the Titan Okeanos, armed perhaps with a rudder as a weapon. The remains of a goddess wielding a tree trunk are barely visible in the background behind Okeanos; she may have represented the Titaness Tethys, mother of Doris. The pair attacks two Giants falling onto the stairs, one of them snake-legged. As on the facing frieze across the staircase, the Giants are assaulted by an eagle of Zeus in the uppermost corner.
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.