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Details
LOT 0400
Bronze Statue of an Etruscan Warrior
20TH CENTURY A.D.
24 1/4 in. (7.6 kg, 61.5 cm high).
A hollow-formed bronze copy of the Mars of Todi, a figure of an Etruscan warrior wearing segmented armour to the chest and shoulders, crested helmet, short tunic; the hands in animated pose with left hand open to accept a weapon; holes beneath feet for mounting.
Provenance
French collection, 1960s-early 2000s.
From an important Paris gallery, France.
with Galerie Athena, Brussels, 9 May 2019, lot 393.
This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by search certificate number no.11691-199344.
Footnotes
The "Mars of Todi" figure is a large, almost life-sized bronze statue of a warrior in armour. It dates from the late 5th - early 4th century B.C., and is believed to have been produced by an Etruscan workman for an Umbrian patron. The figure was probably a votive offering for a religious sanctuary, perhaps sacred to Laran, the Etruscan god of war. It had been buried ritually and left undisturbed until its modern discovery in 1835. It lacks a helmet, and the hands are empty; possibly a patera plate was originally in the open right hand, and a spear gripped in the clenched left hand. The sculptor of the figure followed the Greek contrapposto posture accentuating the carefully modelled lamellar plate armour. The statue bears a short inscription in Umbrian "Ahal Trutitis dunum dede" (Ahal Trutitis gave this gift).
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LOT 0400
Bronze Statue of an Etruscan Warrior
Estimate £3,000 - 4,000€3,480 - 4,640 (for guidance only)$4,050 - 5,400 (for guidance only)
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