122 VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED AT REST, 
his career by 330-320 B.C. Kantharos, the pupil of Eutychides, 
made the statues of the two boy wrestlers Kratinos of Aigira and 
Alexinikos of Elis, who won their victories some time between Ols. 
120.and 130,(=300 and 260,38. G,)-" 
JEGINETAN SCULPTORS. 
We have but little left of the prominent early Aeginetan school 
of bronze sculptors. Of Kallon, the earliest historical sculptor of the 
school, the reputed pupil of Tektaios and Angelion (who in turn were 
the pupils of Dipoinos and Skyllis), we have only literary evidence. 
He was typical of archaic severity just prior to the era of transition, 
and therefore should be compared with Hegias of Athens and Kanachos 
of Sikyon. For Onatas, the most famous of the Aeginetan sculptors, 
whose floruit was in the first half of the fifth century B. C., we have 
evidence of many monuments at Olympia. Besides the colossal 
Herakles dedicated by the Thasians,? a Hermes dedicated by the 
people of Pheneus,’ and a large group of nine statues of Greek heroes 
standing on a curved base faced by a statue of Nestor on another, the 
group being dedicated by the Achaians,‘* he made a chariot and char- 
1oteer to commemorate the victory of Hiero of Syracuse at Olympia in 
468 B.C., for which monument Kalamis furnished two horses.® Glau- 
kias made a bronze chariot for Hiero’s brother Gelo of Gela, who later 
became tyrant of Syracuse, and who won a chariot victory in Ol. 73 
(=488 B.C.).6 This sculptor also excelled in fashioning statues of 
boxers and pancratiasts, making the monuments of the boxers Philon 
of Kerkyra and Glaukos of Karystos, and that of the renowned boxer 
and pancratiast Theagenes of Thasos.’?. The statue of Glaukos was 
represented in the schema of one “sparring” (oxtayax@y),° and so 
was In movement and not at rest. We have athlete statues by three 
other Aeginetan sculptors at Olympia. Thus Ptolichos, the pupil of 
the Sikyonian Aristokles, set up statues of the Aeginetan boy wrestler 
‘Theognetos, who won in Ol. 76 (=476 B.C.), and of the boy boxer 
Epikradios of Mantinea, who won between Ols. (?) 72 and 74 (= 492 and 
1Kratinos: P., VI, 3.6; Hyde, 27; Foerster, 433; Alexinikos: P., VI, 17.7; Hyde, 184; Foer- 
ster, 438. On the sculptor, see Pliny, XXXIV, 85; Brunn, p. 415. 
IPs Don 2 hte 8P., V, 27.8 (=joint work of Onatas and Kalliteles). 
4P., V, 25.8 f. The base has been found in situ east of the temple of Zeus: Ergebn. v. OL., 
Tafelbd., IT, Pl. XVII, 12; Textbd., pp. 145 f. See Plans A and B. 
®P., VI, 12.1. Hiero won three victories in Ols. 76, 77, 78 (=476-468 B. C.): Oxy. Pap., 
Hyde, 105; Foerster, 199, 209,215. The monument was dedicated in 467 B. C. after the death 
of the king. For the sculptor, see Brunn, p. 88. 
6P., VI, 9.4-5; Hyde, 90; Foerster, 180; Inschr. v. Ol., 143. 
7Philon: P., VI, 9.9; Hyde, 91; Foerster, 167 and 179; he won in Ols. (?) 72 and 73 (=492 
and 488 B.C.); Glaukos (boy boxer): P., VI, 10.1-3; Hyde, 93; Foerster, 137; he won in Ol. 65 
(=520 B. C.), but his statue was set up by his son at the beginning of the fifth century 
B. C.: Hyde, p. 42; Theagenes: P., VI, 11.2 f.; he won in Ols. 75 and 76 (=480 and 476 B.C.): 
Oxy. Pap.; Hyde, 104; Foerster, 191, 196. 
’For the meaning of the word oxcapyaxeiv, see infra, Ch. IV, p. 243 and n. 4. 
