120 VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED AT REST. 
that it is an imitation of a bronze work.1 However, as we shall see 
later, it may be rather representative of the Aeginetan school of sculp- 
tors. All these works may tell us of the general character of the 
A pollo, but little of its style. 
No athlete statue by Aristokles or his brother Kanachos is known 
to have stood at Olympia. That the latter actually made victor 
statues, however, 1s proved by Pliny’s statement (J. c.) that he made 
celetizontas pueros. Of the later Sikyonian school we have twenty- 
seven statues of victors made by eleven different sculptors, whose dates 
range from near the end of the fourth down into the third century 
B.C., of whom we shall give a chronological list. Alypos, the pupil 
of the Argive Naukydes, had four statues at Olympia: those of the 
wrestler Symmachos of Elis, of the boy boxer Neolaidas of Pheneus, of 
the boy wrestler Archedamos of Elis, and of the boy and man wrestler 
Euthymenes of Mainalos, all of whom must have won their victories 
some time between Ols. 94 and 104 (= 404 and 364 B.C.).* Kanachos, 
the Younger, made one statue, that of the boy boxer Bykelos of Sikyon, 
who won some time between Ols. 92 and 105 (=412 and 360 B.C.).! 
Olympos made the statue of the pancratiast Xenophon of Aigion, who 
won some time between Ols. 95 and 105 (=400 and 360 B.C.).o The 
sculptor Daidalos, the son and pupil of Patrokles, and probably the 
nephew of Polykleitos, made four monuments for four victors: the 
equestrian group of the Elean charioteer Timon and his son Aigyptos, a 
victor in horse-racing, and statues of the Elean wrestler Aristodemos 
and the stade-runner Eupolemos. ‘Their victories fell between Ols. 96 
and 103 (= 396 and 368 B.C.).6 Damokritos made the statue of the Elean 
boy boxer Hippos, who won between Ols. 96 and 107 (=396 and 352 B.C.).7 
Kleon had five statues credited to him, all but one being of boy victors: 
those of the boy runner Deinolochos of Elis, the pentathlete Hysmon 
of Elis, the two boy boxers Kritodamos, and of Alketos of Kleitor, and 
1The small bronze also found there, 0.155 meter high, belongs tothe same series: B. C. H., X, 
1886, pp. 190 f., and Pl. IX. It greatly resembles the statuette from Naxos. For a list of 
replicas of the statue of Kanachos, see Rayet, Etudes d’archéologie et dart, p. 164; etc. 
?On the style of Kanachos and the Apollo, see also Kekulé, Sitzb. d. preuss. Akad. d. Wiss. 
zu Berlin, 1904, I, pp. 786-801; O. Mueller, Kleine Schriften, II, p. 537; F. W., to no. 51; 
Brunn, pp. 74 f.; Collignon, I, pp. 310 f.; ete. 
sP., VI, 1.3 and 8.5; Hyde, 1, 2, 3, and 78; Foerster, 296, 300, 299, 290 and 305; on Alypos, 
see Pauly-Wissowa, I, p. 1711; Brunn, p. 280; B. C. H., XXI, 1897, pp. 287 f.; and cf. P., 
XS 9210: 
4P., VI, 13.7; Hyde, 116; Foerster, 291; on the sculptor, see Brunn, p. 277. 
°P., VI, 3.13; Hyde, 34; Foerster, 575; on the sculptor, see Brunn, pp. 292 and 419; cf. Hyde, 
p. 34. 
6Timon and Aigyptos, who won some time between Ols. (?) 98 and 101: P., VI, 2.8; Hyde, 17, 
18; Foerster, 310, 301; Aristodemos, Ol. 98: P., VI, 3.4; Hyde, 25; Foerster, 312; Eupolemos, 
Ol. 96: Afr.; P., VI, 3.7; Hyde, 28; Foerster, 294. On Daidalos, see Pauly-Wissowa, IV, 
pp. 2006 f.; Robert, O. S., pp. 191 f.; Brunn, pp. 14 f. 
7P., VI, 3.5; Hyde, 26; Foerster, 325. On Damokritos, see Pauly-Wissowa, IV, p. 2070; 
Brunn, p. 105. 
