242 VICTOR STATUES REPRESENTED IN MOTION. 
We may infer how a Polykleitan statue of a boxer at rest looked, from 
the Roman copy of one in Kassel.!_ Here a youth just out of boyhood is 
represented as standing with the weight of the body resting upon the right 
leg and the head turned to the right. The forearms are covered with 
eloves, the right fist being raised for attack and the left for defense. 
Another marble statue, representing a 
boxer in repose, was found ina fragment- 
ary condition in Sorrento in 1888, and is 
now in the National Museum at Naples 
(Fig.57).2 Itisinscribed as the work of 
Koblanos of Aphrodisiasin Karia, whom 
we know as a ccopyist of the first century 
ve ee NNR 
sptoneaceanss 
PEAT ANOS 

Fic. 56—Boxing Scene. From a Fic. 57.— Statue of a Boxer, 
b.-f. Panathenaic Panel-Amphora. from Sorrento. By Koblanos 
University of Pennsylvania Mu- of Aphrodisias. Museum of 
seum, Philadelphia. Naples. 
A.D., and who was active in reproducing Greek works for the Roman 
market.? The body forms are too badly injured for us accurately to 
‘Furtw., Mp., p. 246, fig. 99; Mw., p. 447, fig. 69; a headless copy in Lansdowne House: 
Michaelis, p. 438, 3; Clarac, V, 851, 2180 A. Here the present head is of different marble from 
the torso and does not belong to it; the body forms recall those of the Doryphoros. It is 1.49 
meters high. 
2Not. Scav., 1888, pp. 289 f. (Barracco); Atti dell’ Accad. di Napoli, 1889, pp. 35 f. (Sogliano) ; 
R. M., IV, 1889, pp. 179 f. (Huelsen); Kalkmann, Die Proport. d. Gesichts in d. gr. Kunst, 
S3stes Berl. Winckelmannsprogr., 1893, Pl. III (profile and front views), and fig. on p. 68 (head); 
B. B., no. 614 (statue), 615 (head, two views); Juethner, p. 84; etc. 
3Furtwaengler (Statuenkopien im Altertum) and Sogliano (J. c.) date the statue in the period of 
Augustus. 
