Any
bronze statue company,
such as ourselves here at Big Statues, will tell you that it takes a pretty
special statue to last for 2,500 years. After all, just consider all of the
hazards that any one statute potentially faces during all of that time.
However,
not only have four particularly important marble maidens from Ancient Greece
survived to the present day, but they are looking as well as they have ever
done, thanks to a meticulous cleaning job.
The
statues had long been coated in black grime, but since 2011, that has gradually
been removed by determined conservators making use of a specially designed laser.
Now, all four statues are ready to dazzle visitors to the Acropolis Museum in
Athens, which marked its fifth anniversary on Friday, June 20.
The
draped figures were sculpted in the late fifth century B.C. as columns for the
Erechtheion, a temple on the 512 feet (156 meters) high sacred rocky hill known
as the Acropolis, which towers over modern Athens. Known as the Caryatids, the
maidens are more than seven and a half feet tall (2.3 metres), and six of them
originally held the Erechtheion's south porch's roof on their heads.
Of
the two not a part of the present project, one can now be found in the British
Museum in London, having been brought to the English capital in the early 19th
century, while the other was cleaned seven years ago.
The
figures left on the Acropolis were left worse for wear as a result of exposure
to high levels of air pollution with the industrialization of Athens over the
last century, suffering from a darker hue and the gradual dissolution of their
features under continuous acid rain. Further damage was prevented by the
removal of the statues to the old Acropolis Museum in 1979, the Erechtheion's
porch gaining cement replicas in their place.
Five
conservators and one laser technician worked hard to gradually clean the
statues in shifts, each one taking between six and eight months, one millimeter
after another. It was extremely painstaking work, but the results have proved
more than worthwhile, Acropolis Museum director Dimitris Pandermalis commenting
that "This is the first time in a
hundred years that you can see the marble without smoke and dirt and really
appreciate the quality of the statues."
There
may be another project to come, using modern imaging techniques to reveal the
colours that were once brightly painted
into the maidens' clothing, only for all visible pigment traces to be visibly
washed away by centuries of winter rain.
We'll
look forward to any future developments relating to these and other Ancient
Greek and Acropolis statues, but in the meantime, as a modern bronze statue
company, we can only salute the incredible work that has been done by the
conservators and technicians on these remarkable sculptures.
Editor’s
Note: Big Statues (http://www.bigstatues.com/)
are represented by the search engine advertising and digital marketing
specialists Jumping Spider Media. Email: info@jumpingspidermedia.co.uk
or call: +44
(0)20 3070 1959 / +34 952 783 637.
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