Statue of a Standing Siren

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Statue of a Standing Siren

Creator

UnknownAll works by this person →More on Getty ULAN
Date
330–300 B.C.
Medium
Terracotta with white slip (latte di calce) and polychromy (red)
Culture
Greek (South Italian, Tarantine)
Department
Sculpture
Institution
Getty Museum

The upper half of the Siren’s body is human, while the lower half features a bird’s tail, legs, and talons, which grip a small, rocky base. The bird part is identical to a second Siren (76.AD.11.3), both of which compose a group with a seated poet, possibly Orpheus (76.AD.11.1). The Siren wears a thigh-length chiton with an apoptygma (cape-like fold) that clings to her body, forming “windswept” pleats. A sash is wrapped high around the chest and two shoulder straps cross over the bust. Her right arm is folded beneath her breasts and her left hand is propped under her tilted head, a pose of grief or contemplation. Her facial features resemble those of the seated poet: well-defined, almond-shaped eyes with a low eyebrow ridge; straight nose with a rounded tip; clearly defined, fleshy lips and prominent chin. Her short neck is marked by a “Venus ring.” Roughly modeled, short curls, most of which have broken off, are applied to her head. Sirens were mythological creatures whose singing lured sailors to their deaths. While the precise identity of the seated poet is uncertain, the imagery of the sculptural group is funerary in nature and may have decorated a tomb.

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