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Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer

Swimming sport Athlete Bronze statue sculpture - Olympic Games - Swimmer

Regular price
€200,00 EUR
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€200,00 EUR
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According to tradition, the most important athletic competitions were inaugurated in 776 B.C. at Olympia in Peloponnese. The victors at all these games brought honor to themselves, their families, and their home-towns. Public honors were bestowed on them, statues were dedicated to them, and victory poems were written to commemorate their feats. For this reason, sports in ancient Greece generally excluded team competitions and performances aimed at setting records. During competition and training, athletes were usually naked and covered with olive oil to keep off the dust. Full of blood, passion and extraordinary feats of athletic endeavour, the Olympic Games were the sporting, social and cultural highlight of the Ancient Greek calendar for almost 12 centuries. “It is hard for us to exaggerate how important the Olympics were for the Greeks,” Paul Christesen, Professor of Ancient Greek History at Dartmouth College, USA, said. 

All our bronze items, are cast in Greece, using the traditional 'lost wax' method. As nothing is mass-produced, there will inevitably be slight variations in patination and coloring. Each piece is, therefore, unique.

 

Details:

Condition: New, Handmade in Greece

Material: Pure Bronze

Height: 21 cm(8.2 inches)

Width: 7 cm(2.7 inches)

Length: 13 cm(5.1 inches)

Weight: 1.7 kg