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  1. 23 de ago. de 2023 · The text on this page is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, unless otherwise noted. Images and other media are excluded. The Dying Gaul; about 1845 - 1855; James Anderson (British, 1813 - 1877); Albumen silver print; Image: 28.6 × 41 cm (11 1/4 × 16 1/8 in.); 84.XM.635.17 The J. Paul Getty Museum in Los ...

  2. Statue of “Capitoline Gaul”. The Celtic warrior lies naked, semi-reclining on his shield, supporting his body, bent with pain, with his right hand resting on the ground; his face contracted with pain looks downwards. The left hand is abandoned on the right leg, bent and with the foot placed under the left leg almost fully extended.

  3. National Gallery of Art

  4. The Dying Gaul: Directed by Craig Lucas. With Patricia Clarkson, Campbell Scott, Peter Sarsgaard, Ryan Miller. A grief-stricken screenwriter unknowingly enters a three-way relationship with a woman and her film executive husband - to chilling results.

  5. 6 de dic. de 2023 · Wiley is one of many artists who have studied the Dying Gaul.As early as 1683, Gérard Audran illustrated the statue in a book about human proportions, and Giovanni Panini even showed artists drawing the Dying Gaul in the foreground of his monumental painting Ancient Rome from 1757. Full-size plaster replicas of the sculpture are held by museums around the world and have been used to teach ...

  6. 29 de abr. de 2024 · The Dying Gaul stands as a haunting testament to the ancient world’s power and brutality. Housed in the Capitoline Museums of Rome, this captivating bronze sculpture has captivated the imaginations of art lovers and historians for centuries. Crafted over 2,000 years ago, the Dying Gaul depicts a wounded Celtic warrior, his muscular frame ...

  7. The Dying Gaul would have been positioned on one of those bases. Literary and epigraphic evidence may provide a little more information about the original work. In his Natural History , Pliny the Elder (1st century CE) describes a "Trumpeter" made by the sculptor Epigonos (NH 34.19) The Pliny passage does not associate Epigonos with Pergamon.