SCULPTURES FROM HALICARNASSOS. 141
1110. Fragment of Bacchic relief, with the extended arms of
a figure, probahly a Satyr, playing on double flutes to
right, and the head of a panther to the loft.
From the Roman Villa, Halicamassos.
Marble. Height, 7 inches. Graco-Roman Guide, II., No. 142.
Ull. Winged female figure, probably a Victory. This statue
is about life-size, and is rejjresonted in rapid motion.
The form is slight, as if that of a young girl. She wears
a long chiton, over which is a diploidion girt at the
waist; a small scarf hangs from the right arm. The
drapery is deeply cut, to express the violent agitation of
the movement. The treatment is florid, but hard and
rough, and the statue is probably not earlier than the
second century a.d. The head, left arm from above the
elbow, right forearm, and greater part of the wings
are wanting; recesses in the bottom of the drapery
mark where the feet have been inserted. This statue is
quite unfinished at the back, and was therefore probably
placed against a wall. Halicamassos.
Parian marble. Height, 4 feet 8J inches. Found broken in two pieces
in a Koman villa at Budrum, where it had been employed with
other fragments of sculpture to make up the level on which a
tessellated pavement had been laid. Newton, Hist. Disc, II.,
p. 305; Grtxco-ltoman Guide, II., No. o5.
1112. Draped female torso; lower part of a figure, standing,
with right knee bent, and wearing sandals, a long chiton
with sleeves, and a fringed mantle wound round the body
and over the left arm. The upper part of the figure, the
left hand, the right arm and right foot, were in separate
pieces of marble, and are now wanting. The right arm
passed across tbe bosom to the left shoulder, wbile the left
arm hung by the side.
From Halicamassos. Presented by Viscount Stratford de
Rcdcliffe, in 1846.
Marble. Height, 4 feet GJ inches. This ttatue was brought from
Budrum in 1846, and it is said to have been found on the
1110. Fragment of Bacchic relief, with the extended arms of
a figure, probahly a Satyr, playing on double flutes to
right, and the head of a panther to the loft.
From the Roman Villa, Halicamassos.
Marble. Height, 7 inches. Graco-Roman Guide, II., No. 142.
Ull. Winged female figure, probably a Victory. This statue
is about life-size, and is rejjresonted in rapid motion.
The form is slight, as if that of a young girl. She wears
a long chiton, over which is a diploidion girt at the
waist; a small scarf hangs from the right arm. The
drapery is deeply cut, to express the violent agitation of
the movement. The treatment is florid, but hard and
rough, and the statue is probably not earlier than the
second century a.d. The head, left arm from above the
elbow, right forearm, and greater part of the wings
are wanting; recesses in the bottom of the drapery
mark where the feet have been inserted. This statue is
quite unfinished at the back, and was therefore probably
placed against a wall. Halicamassos.
Parian marble. Height, 4 feet 8J inches. Found broken in two pieces
in a Koman villa at Budrum, where it had been employed with
other fragments of sculpture to make up the level on which a
tessellated pavement had been laid. Newton, Hist. Disc, II.,
p. 305; Grtxco-ltoman Guide, II., No. o5.
1112. Draped female torso; lower part of a figure, standing,
with right knee bent, and wearing sandals, a long chiton
with sleeves, and a fringed mantle wound round the body
and over the left arm. The upper part of the figure, the
left hand, the right arm and right foot, were in separate
pieces of marble, and are now wanting. The right arm
passed across tbe bosom to the left shoulder, wbile the left
arm hung by the side.
From Halicamassos. Presented by Viscount Stratford de
Rcdcliffe, in 1846.
Marble. Height, 4 feet GJ inches. This ttatue was brought from
Budrum in 1846, and it is said to have been found on the