Nike from Samotraki
Nike from Samotrake (Samotrake) - marble Hellenistic sculpture from the 3rd or 2nd century BC
It is assumed that its creator was Pytokritos of Rhodes. It could be a symbol and a votive thanksgiving for the victories of the Rhodesians in the war against Antiochus III. The Nike figure is 2.40 m high and with wings - 3.28 m; He probably imagined the goddess standing on the prow of the ship.
It was discovered in 1863 on the island of Samotra by the French archaeologist-amateur Charles Champoiseau. Since 1884 it has been exhibited in the Louvre.
It is a sculpture with a great deal of realism, which is expressed primarily by a robe that has been given a special character by the sight of being wet or fluttering in the wind. The right leg and outstretched wings give the form of the deity the harmony of movement.
The graphic representation of this sculpture served as a literary mark for the "Nike" series of The Reader.
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