This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2015) |
The Hope Dionysus is a statue of Dionysus, the god of wine, wearing a panther skin and casually stretching his left arm over a smaller figure of a woman, in a Neo Attic or archaic pose.[1]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/40/Statue_of_Dionysos_leaning_on_a_female_figure_%28%22Hope_Dionysos%22%29_MET_DT6495.jpg/220px-Statue_of_Dionysos_leaning_on_a_female_figure_%28%22Hope_Dionysos%22%29_MET_DT6495.jpg)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/96/Statue_of_Dionysos_leaning_on_a_female_figure_%28%22Hope_Dionysos%22%29_MET_DT6496.jpg/220px-Statue_of_Dionysos_leaning_on_a_female_figure_%28%22Hope_Dionysos%22%29_MET_DT6496.jpg)
This statue, 821⁄4 in. (2.1 m) high, dates to between 27 BC and 68 AD. It was once owned by the 18th-century British antiquities collector Thomas Hope (hence the name), and later belonged to a descendant of Benjamin Franklin, before being acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1990.[2]
Further reading
edit- Philippe de Montebello (1994). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
External links
edit- The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide, a collection catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art containing information on Hope Dionysus (page 308)