Cleon (Greek: Κλέων Σικυώνιος, fl.
around 380 BCE) was an Ancient Greek sculptor of Sicyon.
He was a pupil of Antiphanes, who had been taught by Periclytus, a follower of the great Polykleitos of Argos.
[1] Cleon's age is determined by two bronze statues of Zeus at Olympia executed after the 98th Olympiad, and another of Deinolochus, after the 102nd Olympiad.
[2] He excelled in portrait-statues[3] of which several athletic ones are mentioned by Pausanias.