Torso of Apollo

Cleveland Museum of Art

Torso of Apollo

Date
c. 100–200 CE
Medium
marble
Culture
Italy, Roman
Department
Greek and Roman Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This ancient statue depicts the Greek god Apollo, identified by his youthful body and the fragmentary remains of his kithara, a type of lyre (or stringed instrument) used by poets and musicians in ancient Greece. Both the kithara, decorated with griffins, and the swan upon which it rests (atop a triangular column), signify Apollo’s roles as the god of music and leader of the Muses. Beloved by the Muses for their song, swans were considered sacred to Apollo because he gave them the gift of prophecy. Swans sing a glorious song before they die, knowing they will soon return to Apollo to be reborn. Apollo received his lyre from Hermes, who invented it.

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