
Venus de Milo
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This celebrated marble sculpture depicts a nude female figure in contrapposto stance, her idealized form carved from luminous Parian marble with remarkable sensitivity to anatomical proportion and surface finish. The figure's arms are famously absent, lost to time, lending the work an enigmatic quality that has captivated viewers for centuries. Attributed to Alexandros of Antioch and dating to the Hellenistic period, the sculpture represents the apogee of classical beauty and refinement, combining Greek artistic mastery with a graceful sensuality characteristic of its era. The delicately rendered drapery at the lower body provides both formal elegance and modest concealment, while the figure's serene profile gaze suggests an inner contemplation. Now housed in the Louvre, this iconic work remains one of the most recognizable sculptures in Western art, embodying timeless ideals of feminine form and classical perfection. Photo by Kamilla Isalieva on Unsplash
- Medium
- Parian marble sculpture
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