Apollo
Sleeping HermaphroditeDiscobolusCat and DucksBronze Youth with SpearRoman Commander Leading the BattleApolloBronze Statue of DionysusRoman Senators in Processus ConsularisCupid Riding Aegipan Across the SeaRoman Fresco of Rustic Shrine and SatyrRoman Sea Monster MosaicRoman Fresco Fragments with Women

ApolloPhidias

320
This ivory mask (5th c. BC) represents Apollo—Greek god of light, music, and prophecy—and once belonged to a chryselephantine statue (a prestigious cult image of ivory and gold). Attributed to Phidias, the master sculptor of classical Greece, it is an exceptionally rare survival of this luxury art form. Looted in 1995 and recovered in 2003, it now serves as both a rare survival of luxury cult sculpture and a reminder of ongoing threats to archaeological heritage.