Tg VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED AT REST. 
some idea of how he treated his victor statues, as it seems to have been 
modeled after an athlete statue of the early fifth century B.C., perhaps 
after a work by some pupil of the master. Stephanos belonged to the 
school of Pasiteles, a group of sculptors flourishing at Rome at the end of 
the Republic and the beginning of the Empire. They devoted them- 

Fic. 16.—Bronze Statuette, from Ligourio. Museum of Berlin. 
selves to the reproduction of early fifth-century statues. “They were not 
ordinary copyists, for their works show individual mannerisms and a sys- 
tem of proportions foreign to the originals. Thus their statues have the 
square shoulders of the Argive school, but the slim bodies and slender legs 
of the period of Lysippos and his scholars. Apart from such manner- 
isms, then, in the male figure signed Stephanos, pupil of Pastiteles, 
in the Villa Albani in Rome (PI. 9),! which reappears in a very similar 

1B. B., no. 301; Bulle, 41; von Mach, 321; Helbig, Fuehrer, II, 1846; Guide, 744; Baum., II, 
pal lolene 1391; Colienont II; -p. 661, fe 346; Overbeck, II, p. 473, fig. 228, a; Reinaems 
Rép., II, 2,588, 9; F. W.,:225; 4. Z., XXXVI, 1878, Pl. XV, and pp. 123f.; Annali, 
XXXVITI, 1865, Pl. D and pp. 58 fo Rekule, Gruppe des Kuenstlers Menelaos in Villa Ludo- 
vist, 1870, Pl. IT, 2; pp. 264: Tabi p. 87, fig. 15; Springer-Michaelis, p. 211, fig. 398. 
The best copy of the head of the statue by Stephanos is in the Lateran Museum, Rome: see 
Furtwaengler, Mp., p. 217, fig. 92; Mw., p. 405, fig. 62.. The statue is 1.44 meters high (Bulle). 
For the inscription on the tree- ee see I. G. B., no. 374. 
