Marble statuette of the goddess Hekate

Stone Sculpture
The Met
Bequest of Reginald E. Gillmor, 1960
61.18
10 3/4 x 4 1/4 in. (27.31 x 10.8 cm)
Roman
Marble

Details

Adaptation of a Greek statue of about 425 B.C. attributed to Alkamenes

Hekate, the goddess of the moon and of sorcery, presided over crossroads. She was first represented as three women standing against a pillar in a statue erected in about 425 B.C. on the bastion of Athena Nike at the entrance to the Akropolis in Athens. It was one of the earliest statues deliberately made to imitate the stiff linear way of depicting clothes that had marked works of the sixth century B.C.