THE AFFILIATED SCHOOLS OF ARGOS AND SIKYON. 115 
Hagelaidas,’’' though here again Furtwaengler would ascribe it to 
Hegias.? ‘The Parian marble statue of an ephebe found on the Akropolis 
(Fig. 17)’—one of the most beautiful recovered during the exca- 
vations there—shows the same Argive influ- 
ence. [his statue is chronologically the first 
masterpiece, thus far recovered, which marks 
the break with archaism by having its head 
turned slightly to one side? It has the 
same pose as the Athlete by Stephanos and 
probably represents a palestra victor. The 
head, with its heavy chin, and the muscular 
body strikingly resemble the Harmodios (Fig. 
32), which has led Furtwaengler and others 
to ascribe it to Kritios or his school.2 At 
the same time a similarity is seen between 
this head and that of the Apollo of the West 
Gable at Olympia, and so with Bulle and 
others we ascribe it to the Argive school. 
One of the female statues (Koraz) found on 
the Akropolis, and approximately of the 
same date as the ephebe, viz, the fragmentary 
one consisting of head and bust and known 
popularly as la petite boudeuse, shows the 
same revolt against lonism.6 In many 
respects this statue is very different from 1G. 17—Statue of an 
most of the other Akropolis. Korai. The eee Tomar Caran 
olis. ropolis Mu- 
eyes are not yet set back naturally, but the seum, Athens. 
appearance of depth ts attained by thicken- 

1Richardson, p. 101, fig. 49 (side), and p. 154 for the statement; Lechat, 4u Musée, Pl. XVI; 
Bulle, pp. 462-3, figs. 135, 136; B. B., no. 461 (middle row, bottom); 4. M., XII, 1887, pp. 
372 f. (Studniczka); de Ridder, no. 467; Perrot-Chipiez, VIII, p. 679, fig. 347; it is 0.10 meter 
high (Graef., 4. M., XV, 1890, p. 16, n. 1). Forthe figure of Apollo, see Bulle, no. 42; Bildz. 
vy. Ol., Tafelbd., Pl. XXII, and Textbd., p. 69; von Mach, 86 (statue), 446 (head). The 
original height was 3.10 meters (Bulle).. 
2M>p., p. 53; Mw., p. 80; sostes Berl. Winckelmannsprogr., pp. 140-1 and 148. 
3The torso was found in 1865, the head in 1888: torso, 4. M., V, 1880, p. 20 and Pl. I, with 
wrong head (Furtwaengler); head, Arch. Eph., 1888, p. 81 and Pl. IL]; figure in outline, 
Collignon, I, pp. 374-5, figs. 191-2; Dickins, no. 698, pp. 264 f.; B. B., 461 b; Bulle, 40 and 
figs. 15, 14 on pp. 87-8 (from a cast); von Mach, 57; Overbeck, I, p. 205, fig. 48; Lechat, p. 452, 
fig. 38; Reinach, Rép., II, 2, 588, 1; Springer-Michaelis, p. 217, fig. 403; Furtwaengler, 4. 4., 
1889, p. 147, Mw., pp. 76, n. 2, and 81; Wolters, 4. M., XIII, 1888, p. 226. Bulle dates it 
toward 480 B. C. 
4The same turn appears in the sixth-century Rampin head: Collignon, I, p. 360, fig. 182. 
It will be discussed later on, pp. 126-127. 
’Furtwaengler, sostes Berl. Winckelmanns progr., pp. 132 and 150; Mp., p. 19; Dickins, p. 265. 
6It is a dedication by Euthydikos: Collignon, I, Pl. VI (right), opp. p. 356; von Mach, 
no. 26 (right); Gardner, Hbk., p. 212, fig. 47; Bulle, 240; Lechat, du Musée, p. 367, fig. 37; 
Perrot-Chipiez, VIII, p. 595, fig. 299; Richardson, p. 78, fig. 33; Springer-Michaelis, p. 207, 
fig. 390. Bulle gives it as half life-size. | 
