Terracotta Siren

Title
Terracotta Siren
Repository
J. Paul Getty Museum
Alternative
Statue of a Standing Siren Sculpture
Creator
unknown
Photographer
Lowenstam, Steven
Creator Display
unknown Ancient Greek (artist)
Description
Part of Group of 3 terracotta works titled "Poet as Orpheus and two sirens." Group described by Getty Museum as a seated man flanked by sirens, creatures part bird and part woman, in a nearly life-size terracotta group. In Greek mythology, the singing of the sirens lured sailors to their deaths; thus the creatures have general funerary connotations. The seated man is also a singer, as shown by his open mouth and his now-missing lyre, which he once cradled in his left arm. His precise identity, however, is uncertain. He might be Orpheus, who was famous for his singing and who traveled to the land of the dead and was able to return. But in art of this period, Orpheus is usually shown wearing a specific Eastern costume not seen here. Therefore, this man may just be an ordinary mortal, perhaps the deceased, in the guise of a poet or singer. Originally brightly painted, this large-scale terracotta sculpture is characteristic of the Greek colonies in South Italy. With its funerary imagery, the group may have decorated a tomb. Although terracotta sculpture is also found in mainland Greece, artists in the Greek colonies in South Italy used this medium with greater frequency and on a larger scale because there were few sources of good stone suitable for sculpting. --The J. Paul Getty Museum
View
Front
Coverage
Tarento, Apulia, Italy (creation)
Temporal
350-300 BCE
Subject
Book 12 Odyssey II Sirens
Style Period
Late Classical
Work Type
statues
Date
-0350/-0300
Identifier
Lowenstam_VRC_02272
Item Locator
Box 6, Section 9
Rights
In Copyright
Dc Rights Holder
University of Oregon, Department of Classics
Local Collection Name
Steven Lowenstam Collection
Type
Image
Format
image/tiff
Measurements
Height: 140 cm
Material
terracotta | polychromy
Set
Lowenstam Collection of Ancient Western Art and Archaeology
Primary Set
Lowenstam Collection of Ancient Western Art and Archaeology
Institution
University of Oregon
Id Current Repository
76.AD.11.3