Further images
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 1)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 2)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 3)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 4)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 5)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 6)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 7)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 8)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 9)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 10)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 11)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 12)
- (View a larger image of thumbnail 13)
Of a particularly high quality, this head was cast as a single piece and attached to a figure, or was used as an element in a larger decorative schema.
Triton was the son of Poseidon and the sea-nymph Amphitrite. He was a sea god, with the head and torso of a man and the tail of a fish, or often a pair of spiraling fish tails.
Provenance
Paul Angoulvent (1899-1976), France; acquired prior to 1956, inventory number B4, previously mounted on a 19th century giallo antico base.
Angoulvent was the former director of the Chalcographie du Louvre, founder then President of the Presses Universitaires de France from 1934 to 1968, as well as head of the Réunion des Musées Nationaux.
Literature
Compare an example of a bearded man in combat in Claude Rolley, Greek Bronzes (Fribourg, 1986), no.179.
Also Ursula Höckmann, Antiken Bronzen, eine auswahl von Ursula Höckman, Kataloge der Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel Nr. 4, (Kassel, 1972), cover and Tafel 10, no.29 identified as PoseidonA life-size head of Poseidon with the same characteristic thick locks of wet hair is in The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, object number 2001.150