Statuette of Mercury

Roman

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 175

The Roman god Mercury is represented here as a young naked man with wings both on his ankles and on his characteristic hat (petasos). Most Roman household shrines, especially in Gaul and Italy, had such bronze statuettes of Mercury, who served as the protector of wealth. The money pouch is a typically Roman attribute of the god, while the balanced and relaxed position (contrapposto) is reminiscent of the widely copied figure of Hermes made by the Classical Greek sculptor Polykleitos.

Statuette of Mercury, Bronze, Roman

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