Hermes (or Hephaestus) and Pallas Athena altar from Corfu 100 BCE to 100 CE

"Preserving two figures (plus a faint foot) striding across a curving surface, this fragment constitutes approximately 1/6th of a large circular altar or statue base. Its full circumference accommodated 12 figures—likely the Olympian deities. Athena—with spear, helmet, and stylized aegis, or breastplate—is with either the smith God Hephaistos, holding a hammer, or the messenger God Hermes, with his staff. Now lost are Zeus, Poseidon, Demeter, and others. The eclectic carving style includes stylized drapery with zigzag and swallowtail folds, recalling the Archaic period (600–480 BC), on tall and slender figures characteristic of later times."

-taken from clevelandart link below

 

Hermes (or Hephaestus) and Pallas Athena altar from Corfu 100 BCE to 100 CE.

Source/Quote:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/1915.559

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