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Buckle showing Hercle (Herakles) with Omphale (Queen of Lydia), Etruscan, bronze, 525-500 BCE possibly found in Vulci, Italy at the Royal Ontario Museum

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Herakles, the most popular of the Greek heroes, was known in Etruria as Hercle. He was wholeheartedly adopted by the Etruscans and is frequently seen on engraved mirrors, bronze statuettes, and architectural terracottas. His fabled “labours” were a favourite theme for Etruscan artists. Hercle is usually recognized, as in Greek art, by his lion-skin and club. - Royal Ontario Museum Image: Buckle showing Hercle (Herakles) with Omphale (Queen of Lydia), Etruscan, bronze, 525-500 BCE possibly found in Vulci, Italy at the Royal Ontario Museum courtesy of the museum.

Art of the Ancient World. Ongoing. At the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Art of the Ancient World.  Ongoing.  At the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts. This idealized female head, said to have been found at Memphis in Egypt, leaves it unclear who is represented. The flawless features and loosely fastened, undulating hair, are appropriate for a goddess such as Artemis or Aphrodite; the style may show the influence of Skopas, one of the leading Greek sculptors of the fourth century. Yet the head also bears a marked resemblance-especially the long, delicate nose-to portraits of ArsinoĆ« II, queen of Egypt in the 270s B.C.; the ribbon in her hair could be a diadem, signature headgear of later Greek royalty. Image courtesy of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The Boston Museum of Fine Arts is home to one of the world’s premiere encyclopedic collections of antiquities, featuring more than 85,000 works of art from Egypt, Nubia, the Near East, Greece, Italy, Cyprus, and Anatolia. These works range in date from about 6500 BCE to 600...