Proceedings of the XXIst International Congress on Ancient Bronzes (Supplementum 4)
Articles

New research on the Cleveland Apollo

Seth Pevnick
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland OH, United States
Colleen Snyder
The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland OH, United States

Published 2024-09-30

Keywords

  • Cleveland Apollo (Sauroktonos),
  • large-scale bronze assembly,
  • reconstruction

How to Cite

Pevnick, S., & Snyder, C. (2024). New research on the Cleveland Apollo. Dissertationes Archaeologicae, 87–112. https://doi.org/10.17204/dissarch.suppl4.87

Abstract

This paper presents new technical details on the original manufacture and modern reconstruction of the Cleveland Apollo, a nearly life-size ancient bronze sculpture of the youthful god acquired by the Cleveland Museum of Art in 2004. Although previous studies had shown the sculpture to be an indirect lost-wax casting, few joins had been discussed in detail. Recent, more comprehensive radiographs, combined with extensive external and internal visual analysis, now permit a more thorough explanation of the assembly, from work on wax models through casting (in at least six sections), patching, and finishing, as well as post-manufacture damage. Together with radiography, analysis of numerous and varied modern restoration materials provides a fuller picture of the way the object was more recently re-assembled. A new digital 3D model of the sculpture, now available, will be essential for future study, interpretation, and display.