Leonidas Drosis

Born in Tripoli or Nafplion,[1] to a German (Bavarian) father named Von Dorsch, who was a soldier and musician, and a Greek mother named Meksi, he later took the Greek surname Drosis due to his love for Greece and because he identified solely as Greek.

[1][2][3] He later studied in Athens and Munich on a scholarship provided by Simon Sinas.

Drosis's major work is the extensive neo-classical architectural ornament at the Academy of Athens, for the Danish-Austrian architect Theophil Hansen.

Drosis sculpted the principle multi-figure pediment sculpture, on the theme of the birth of Athena, based on a design by painter Carl Rahl.

[4] Drosis is also responsible for the figures of Athena and Apollo with lyre on the Academy's flanking pillars, and the seated marble figures of Plato and Socrates, which were executed "by the Italian sculptor Piccarelli"[5] (the eight smaller pediments in the Academy complex are the terra-cotta work of Austrian sculptor Franz Melnitzky).

Leonidas Drosis
Close up view of the Athena column, Academy of Athens (modern)