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Hellenistic-style Roman sculptures

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Laocoön and His Sons
sculpture in the Museo Pio-Clementino
Horses of Saint Mark
ancient bronze horses at the basilica of San Marco, Venice
Pasquino
thumb|Modern pasquinades in Italian on the base of the statue Pasquino or Pasquin (; Latin: Pasquinus, Pasquillus) is the name used by Romans since the early modern period to describe a battered Hellenistic-style statue perhaps dating to the third century BC, which was unearthed in the Parione district of Rome in the fifteenth century. It is located in a piazza of the same name on the northwest corner of the Palazzo Braschi (Museo di Roma); near the site where it was unearthed.
Borghese Gladiator
Hellenistic sculpture
Sleeping Hermaphrodite
ancient marble sculpture, modified by Gianlorenzo Bernini
Boy with Thorn
artistic type
heroic nudity
concept in classical scholarship to describe the use of nudity in classical sculpture to indicate that a sculpture's apparently mortal human subject is in fact a hero or semi-divine being
Piraeus Lion
ancient sculpted lion now in Venice arsenal
Crouching Venus
sculpture by Doidalsa
statue of Antinous
statue at the Delphi museum
Borghese Vase
Roman era ornamental garden vase
Hermes Belvedere
sculpture in the Museo Pio-Clementino
Juno Ludovisi
colossal Roman marble head of the 1st century CE
Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus
sculpture by Scopas
Medici Vase
Roman era ornamental garden vase
Medusa Rondanini
sculpture
Furietti Centaurs
pair of statues
Sleeping Ariadne
statue
Sperlonga sculptures
Ancient Roman sculptures, rediscovered 1957
Statue of the Tiber river with Romulus and Remus
ancient Roman sculpture
Ludovisi Dionysus
ancient Roman marble statue
Warwick Vase
Roman vase discovered in Tivoli in 1771
Tiber Dionysus
bronze sculpture of the god Dionysus
Arles bust
presumed bust of Caesar
Marcellus as Hermes Logios
sculpture by Cleomenes the Athenian