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An ancient statue in Rome
Indian deity - Goddess Durga idols being prepared for the festival Durga Puja. Its a 5 day long festival which ends with the immersion of these idols in the river.
Neptune sculpture in Trevi Fountain. Rome, Italy
Detailed capture of bronze figures adorning a fountain in Florence, Italy, exuding the essence of Renaissance art and history
East Asian ethnic figures form the capital of a column in the north portal of City Hall in Philadelphia. The unusual capital is part of a group of columns, each featuring a different race. The design was by Alexander Milne Calder (1846-1923,) who was responsible for more than 250 marble and bronze sculptures adorning City Hall.
Io with bovine horns is kept under surveillance by Argos to prevent Zeus from seducing her, as requested by Hera.\nPompeii - House of Meleagro.\nIo was, in Greek mythology, one of the mortal lovers of Zeus. An Argive princess, she was an ancestor of many kings and heroes, such as Perseus.\nIo was tied to an olive tree in Heraion, the holy temple of Hera outside Argos, and the fierce hundred-eyed dog, Argus Panoptes, was guarding her and keeping Zeus away. However, Zeus found the way to set Io free and disregard his wife without doing it in person.
Rome, Italy - December 30, 2021: Athlete statue, designed by architect Enrico Del Debbio. Built between 1928 and 1932 and inaugurated as a Stadio dei Marmi, it stands inside the Foro Italico a large public sports complex. Time lapse with moving clouds, Stadio dei Marmi (Stadium of the Marbles)
July 3, 2019: The Stadio dei Marmi (\
Statute of an American Indian chief and an Australian aborigine woman and child on the side of the old Hofburg  Palace in Vienna. Dates from the imperial period of the Hapsburgs when Vienna was a centre of power.
Details of the Trevi Fountain in Rome
Fontana Pretoria detail , look sideways sculptures at \nPiazza Pretoria (Palermo). Piazza della Vergogna , Italia. As you can see no sculpture look in  your eyes, is called the shamefulness, embarrassment  square.
Church of St Minas in Firá on Santorini Caldera in South Aegean Islands, Greece, with a blurred garden ornament in the foreground.
Argos watching over Io to prevent Zeus from seducing her, as requested by Hera.\nPompeii - House of Meleagro.\nIo was, in Greek mythology, one of the mortal lovers of Zeus. An Argive princess, she was an ancestor of many kings and heroes, such as Perseus.\nIo was tied to an olive tree in Heraion, the holy temple of Hera outside Argos, and the fierce hundred-eyed dog, Argus Panoptes, was guarding her and keeping Zeus away. However, Zeus found the way to set Io free and disregard his wife without doing it in person.\nHigh Resolution -  partially digitally restored
Noah's Ark and the Flood in the old book The Bible in Pictures, by G. Doreh, 1897
Sitting baroque putto statues of Dresden Zwinger. Dresden was made by architect Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann and sculptor Balthasar Permoser in 1728
Vienna - skulpture of America and Austrailia from facade of Kunsthistorisches museum
Tomb of Lorenzo the Magnificent and his brother Giuliano and Michelangelo's, Madonna and Child in Medici Chapel, Florence, Italy.
Turin, Piedmont, Italy - 12 09 2023: The Count of Cavour was an Italian politician, businessman, economist and noble, and a leading figure in the movement towards Italian unification.
Sculptures in Piazza della Signoria of Florence:Rape of the Sabine
Close-up detail of a biblical figure in Bernini's sculpted Baroque Fountain of the Four Rivers in Piazza Navona, juxtaposed against a billboard for Travis Scott's album release in the historic old town.
(469–399 BC), ancient Athenian philosopher. This is his statue, located before the Academy of Athens, Greece.
According to Doro Levi's chronology, Antakya mosaics are dated to the beginning of the 2nd century AD and just after the great earthquake of 526 AD.
The Seine and the Marne at the Jardin des Tuileries
Tovia and Angel in the old book The Bible in Pictures, by G. Doreh, 1897
Pyramus and Thisbe are a pair of legendary, ill-fated lovers from Babylon whose story forms part of Ovid's Metamorphoses. House of Loreius Tiburtinus, Pompeii.\n\nPyramus and Thisbe's parents, driven by rivalry, forbade their union, but they communicated through a crack in the wall between their houses. They planned to meet under a mulberry tree, but a series of tragic misunderstandings led to their deaths: Thisbe fled from a lioness, leaving her cloak behind, which Pyramus found and mistook as evidence of her death. Believing Thisbe was killed by the lioness, Pyramus committed suicide, staining the mulberry fruits with his blood. Thisbe, upon finding Pyramus dead, also killed herself. The gods changed the color of the mulberry fruits to honor their forbidden love.
A statue in Campo Santo, Pisa, Tuscany, Italy
Bologna, Italy - July 30, 2022: One of the wall reliefs at the Fontana della Ninfa in Parco della Montagnola, Bologna, Italy
Detail of the sculpture \
Painting by Luigi Sabatelli dated 1806 in the Chapel of Madonna del Conforto, Cathedral of Arezzo
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