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Ancient Sculpture Satire (PAN) plays the flute
Argos watching over Io to prevent Zeus from seducing her, as requested by Hera.\nPompeii - House of Meleagro.\nIo was, in Greek mythology, one of the mortal lovers of Zeus. An Argive princess, she was an ancestor of many kings and heroes, such as Perseus.\nIo was tied to an olive tree in Heraion, the holy temple of Hera outside Argos, and the fierce hundred-eyed dog, Argus Panoptes, was guarding her and keeping Zeus away. However, Zeus found the way to set Io free and disregard his wife without doing it in person.\nHigh Resolution -  partially digitally restored
Classical mythology. A Triton blowing a conch shell, from old baroque fountain completed in 1823 in Rome People's Square
Mannekin Pis wearingas a climber
In Greek and Roman mythology god of the forge and blacksmiths Hephaestus. Horizontal image. Close up.
Sculptures and statues Chapter Fountain at Kapitelplatz in Salzburg, Austria. Detailed View. The fountain was originally built in 1732 under the guidance of Archbishop Leopold Firmian to be used as a horse pond.
Details of the interiors of Collegiata di San Gaudenzio church, Varallo, Italy
Statue of Herkules at the Herkulespavillionen in Copenhagen.
East Doors (Gates of Paradise) by Lorenzo Ghiberti on Florence Baptistery (Battistero di San Giovanni) in Tuscany, Italy. These doors consist of 10 panels depicting scenes from the Old Testament and were commissioned in 1424. Once completed, they were described by Michelangelo as being fit to be the 'gates of paradise'. The doors displayed are now a copy of the original, with those being displayed in a local museum.
Gdansk, Poland - January 1, 2015: Statue of Hermes in Old Town of Gdansk by night, Poland
copy of an Italian bronze statue of Hercules, divine hero in Greek mythology and son of Zeus and Alcmene, from the second half of the 16th century in Grenoble; Grenoble, France
The House of the Faun in ancient Pompeii built during the second century BC, the House of the Faun was named for the bronze statue of the dancing faun located, Fauns are spirits of untamed woodland.
Den Spauwer fountain in central Brussels
Heavenly music, depicted with an angel playing the trombone
marble sculpture of the paws of a faun
An sculpture image
Statues in Firenze, Piazza della Signoria
Brussels, Belgium - May 19, 2023: Facade of tenement house called The Fox, House of the Corporation of Haberdashers. It is one of magnificent halls of the former Brussels guilds in Grand Place
stockholm sweden august - 21 - 2021 The Dansen (dancer) statue, carved in 1911 by Carl Eldh, on the City Hall square  Stockholm, Sweden
Palermo, Italy - July 18, 2022: Interior details and sculptures of the Oratorio del Rosario di Santa Cita in Palermo
Ancient classical sculpture depicting a man and a woman looking at each other. It is part of one of the fountains adorning the Maria-Theresien Platz, in central Vienna. The large square divides the two identical palaces that host the Naturhistorisches Museum - Natural History Museum, and the Kunsthistorisches Museum - the Art History Museum. All the complex was built in the second half of the nineteenth century. Black and white image.
Milan, Italy - October 22, 2022: Milan, Lombardy, Italy: the medieval castle known as Castello Sforzesco
Batumi, Georgia-July 27, 2018: Statue of Poseidon, God of the Sea in Batumi. The statue was taken as a half portrait and is in gold color.
Ancient statue isolated on white background - a man drinking from the horn of plenty (cornucopia) as symbol of wealth wealth and prosperity
Cemetery Verano, Rome, Italy: detail of the statue of Silence by Giuseppe Blasetti (1877)
Figures of satyrs in the Zwinger palace in Dresden,Germany.
CHIANG MAI, THAILAND - FEBRUARY 26, 2018: Close up of a statue with a buddhist's hand that has a cigarette, put by some tourists intended as a joke.
The Faune Dansant (Dancing Faun) statue by sculptor Eugene-Louis Lequesne in Paris's Jardin du Luxembourg
Ancient Roman fresco ( 45-79 d.C. ) from the Augusteum-Basilica, Herculaneum.\nAlcestis and Admetus. The oracle predicts the death of Admetus.\nAlcestis, in Greek legend, the beautiful daughter of Pelias, king of Iolcos. She is the heroine of the eponymous play by the dramatist Euripides ( c. 484–406 bce ). According to legend, the god Apollo helped Admetus, son of the king of Pherae, to harness a lion and a boar to a chariot in order to win Alcestis's hand.
Free Images: "bestof:Jacob Jordaens - Satyr Playing the Pipe (Jupiter's Childhood) (fragment) - Google Art Project.jpg special url_id QgFYwwnIvypLNA PD-old-100-1923 1678"
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