Three grace bronze statue

Méretei: 32cm magas, 14cm széles, 18cm hosszú

150.000 HUF 411.79 USD

Item details
Listed: April 01, 2024
Item code: 2724076
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Watchers: 12
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vapiano (844)    
BUDAPEST

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Subject:nude
Material:bronze
Mark/Sign:yes
Condition:flawless
Seller may have used machine translator (e.g. Google Translate) to present this item in English. See original

Three grace works of art

Bronze sculpture, dimensions: 32cm high, 14cm wide, 18cm long, on a marble pedestal, foreign artist, in perfect condition.

The Charids (Greek: χάριτες, roma gratiae) in Greek-Roman mythology are goddesses of charm, kindness, goodness, creativity and fertility, who embodied the harmony of nature. There were three: the youngest aglaia the brilliant, euphrowing pleasure and the oldest thaleia are blossoming. [1] In Roman times they were also called goddesses of grace and beauty in the Roman times.

Kharis is often referred to as Zeus and Eurüne's daughters, but sometimes appear as Dionysus and Aphrodite, or as Hegel and the Aeglegye of the Nazi. They are the protectors of the soil's fertility, the people's people - they sprout everything that pleases eyes and souls, and give them the physical and spiritual beauty for the youth. That is why they are the patrons of poetry, music and dance, and also the great masters of art, besides the patrons of love, patriotism, the patrons of gratitude and the muses. The Charids as interpreters of joy are sometimes interpreted as opposites of the diviners of anger. Aphrodite, Apollo, and Dionysus; their shape sometimes melds into the horizons. Early Greek myths show them as a serious, dignified goddess. In the late Hellenistic period - especially the poetic effect - the image of the Kharis had changed, lost its seriousness, and with its figures, the joys and playfulness were coupled. According to Homer's words, as a cheerful daughters aphrodite, they accompany the godfather of love. For the mystical night rituals of the celebrated Kharisian celebrations, people made sacrificial bouquets of field flowers, singing them with singing and dancing.

The Cephisus River near the delphi is the sacred place of the Kharis


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