| SCULPTURE OF ANCIENT
MESSENE (DAMOPHON)
Damophon,
son of Philippos of Messene, was the most famous sculptor
of the mature Hellenistic period in southern Greece.
He devoted himself to making statues exclusively of
gods and heroes. His idealistic conception of the art
of statuary was completely alien to the realistic demands
of portrait statues. The classicizing features of his
figures of heroes and gods were to some extent dictated
by the traditional, conservative character of this category
of sculptures. He worked mainly in marble, though also
in wood and bronze. In his marble works, which were
normally colossal, he occasionally employed the technique
of the acrolithic statue, though he normally on the
principle of 'piecing' - that is, of separately worked
pieces of marble which were joined with the aid of metal
clamps and glue. The technique of 'piecing', which utilizes
even the smallest pieces of marble, was inevitable in
the case of statues of colossal size or figures with
distinct movement, because of the impossibility of quarrying
single blocks of marble of adequate size. Thanks to
the traveler Pausanias, who held the art of Damophon
in great esteem, we know of at least fifteen works by
him (five of them multifigural compositions), which
were erected in sanctuaries at four Peloponnesian cities.
Nine compositions by Damophon stood in Messene, two
at Aigion and there were three works in the Arcadian
capital, Megalopolis, and a cult group in Lykosoura
in Arcadia. Of these, the colossal four-figure group
in the temple of Despoina at Lykosoura was found during
excavations in 1910.
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good idea of his art and skill in rendering delicate,
transparent fabric or the plasticity of soft female
flesh is given by a group of marine creatures, a Triton
and two Tritonesses, from the arm and backrests of a
marble throne for the goddesses at Lykosoura. Damophon
was also invited to Olympia by the Eleians to repair
the gold and ivory cult statue of Zeus, created by Pheidias
and renowned throughout the ancient world, and he was
accorded special honours for his work by the Eleian
council. Recent excavations at Messene have brought
to light torsos and fragments of all his works that
stood in the Asklepieion: the three-figure group of
Asklepios-Machaon-Podaleirios, the ten-figure group
of Apollo and the nine Muses, and the figures of Thebes
and Herakles, Fortune, and Artemis Phosphoros, which
are now on display in the local museum. An inscription
from Messene dating from the 2nd cen-tury BC, illuminated
many aspects of his personality and furnished fresh
information relating to his artistic activity, both
in Arcadian Lykosoura and in other cities of the Peloponnese,
central Greece, and the islands. Damophon was a prominent
figure who enjoyed financial prosperity and political
influence in his native city. His fame as a great sculptor,
spread beyond the boundaries of both Messene and the
Peloponnese. His floruit may be placed with relative
certainly between 210 and 180 BC. His works should not
be regarded as a Classicising reaction to Asiatic baroque,
but as original neoclassical creations. His floruit
coincides with that of his birthplace, Messene, before
the city was obliged, through Roman ntervention, to
join the Achaean Confederacy in 182 BC.
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