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Grave stele of Stratokles
Greek
Classical Period
390-380 B.C.
Medium/Technique
Marble, Pentelic
Dimensions
Overall: 59 x 40.5 x 11.4cm (23 1/4 x 15 15/16 x 4 1/2in.)
158.5 LBS Mounted DV
158.5 LBS Mounted DV
Credit Line
John H. and Ernestine A. Payne Fund
Accession Number1971.129
CollectionsAncient Greece and Rome
ClassificationsSculpture
This modestly sized stele, a type of grave marker popular in and around Athens, especially in the fourth century B.C., is topped by a pediment carved in relief and inscribed with the name of the deceased, Strato-kles, son of Prokles. Below is a combat scene: a bearded warrior, wearing a crested, face-framing helmet and
a tunic, with the right shoulder left free for action, raises his sword to strike at a fallen opponent, who is also bearded and wears a conical helmet. The scene is carved in low relief with a light yet energetic touch. The hints of foreshortening and the frontal head of the victor, tricky to render in shallow relief, are deftly handled, while the swirls of his cloak behind him echo the calligraphic drapery style fashionable in more ambitious sculpture of the time.
The basic combat composition is a formula. Since the deceased always appears as the winner, Stratokles is recognized in the dominant figure, even though, in typical Greek fashion, the defeated warrior is also presented with sympathy and respect. The opponent's helmet style identifies him as a Boiotian, from the region neighboring Attika to the north. Since border skirmishes were chronic and more serious warfare frequent in this troubled period, Stratokles may have fallen in battle. However, he may have died of some other cause and been shown as a warrior simply because he was a man in his prime, accustomed to bearing arms. As was common around Athens at the time, this monument commemorates a specific individual by celebrating him for his role within society, rather than actively differentiating him from others.
a tunic, with the right shoulder left free for action, raises his sword to strike at a fallen opponent, who is also bearded and wears a conical helmet. The scene is carved in low relief with a light yet energetic touch. The hints of foreshortening and the frontal head of the victor, tricky to render in shallow relief, are deftly handled, while the swirls of his cloak behind him echo the calligraphic drapery style fashionable in more ambitious sculpture of the time.
The basic combat composition is a formula. Since the deceased always appears as the winner, Stratokles is recognized in the dominant figure, even though, in typical Greek fashion, the defeated warrior is also presented with sympathy and respect. The opponent's helmet style identifies him as a Boiotian, from the region neighboring Attika to the north. Since border skirmishes were chronic and more serious warfare frequent in this troubled period, Stratokles may have fallen in battle. However, he may have died of some other cause and been shown as a warrior simply because he was a man in his prime, accustomed to bearing arms. As was common around Athens at the time, this monument commemorates a specific individual by celebrating him for his role within society, rather than actively differentiating him from others.
Catalogue Raisonné
Sculpture in Stone (MFA), no. 064; Sculpture in Stone and Bronze (MFA), p. 108 (additional published references); Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), p. 074-075.
DescriptionThe rectangular area above the figures in relief has been carved in very low relief to form a pediment with akroteria and a curving molding below the architrave. On this last is carved (STRATOKLES PROKLEOS "Stratokles, son of Prokles").
A bearded warrior with short tunic, belted below the overfold at the waist, scabbard-strap, fluttering cloak, and crested helmet charges at a fallen foe. His short sword is drawn for a cut and thrust, and he holds a round shield on his left arm. He is undoubtedly Stratokles, at an epic moment in his military career. The fallen warrior, similarly bearded and also clad in a tunic and cloak, his short sword still sheathed, wears the conical helmet or pilos associated with Boiotians to the north of Attica.
The stele is broken off irregularly along the lower part of the fallen warrior. Part of the right-hand akroterion and the top of the central akroterion are missing. There is slight damage to the surface, above the cloak of the attacking warrior and on the shield and tunic of the fallen warrior.
Reddish yellow patina
A bearded warrior with short tunic, belted below the overfold at the waist, scabbard-strap, fluttering cloak, and crested helmet charges at a fallen foe. His short sword is drawn for a cut and thrust, and he holds a round shield on his left arm. He is undoubtedly Stratokles, at an epic moment in his military career. The fallen warrior, similarly bearded and also clad in a tunic and cloak, his short sword still sheathed, wears the conical helmet or pilos associated with Boiotians to the north of Attica.
The stele is broken off irregularly along the lower part of the fallen warrior. Part of the right-hand akroterion and the top of the central akroterion are missing. There is slight damage to the surface, above the cloak of the attacking warrior and on the shield and tunic of the fallen warrior.
Reddish yellow patina
InscriptionsΣΤΡΑΤΟΚΛΗΣ ΠΡΟΚΛΕΟΣ
Provenance1912: said to have been found in Attica in 1912 (D. von Bothmer); by 1918: Vicomte du Dresnay Collection, Château du Dréneuc (Loire-Inférieure) (published by P. Perdrizet, Antiquités grecques de la collection du Vicomte du Dresnay, 1918, pl. 4); by 1969: with Hôtel Drouot, 7, Rue Drouot, Paris (Drouot auction, Paris, December 15, 1969, lot 134); purchased at Drouot auction by Münzen und Medaillen A.G., Malzgasse 25, Basel, Switzerland; purchased by MFA from Münzen und Medaillen A.G., March 21, 1971