Venus of Martres

The Venus of Martres is a sculpture fragment from an antique replica of the Aphrodite of Knidos.

The Venus of Martres consists of a marble head in good general condition, although the tip of the nose is damaged.

The hair is held in place by a ribbon that circles the head twice and shapes it into a bun.

In his 1828 catalogue[1] Alexandre Dumège identifies the fragment as representing Venus: Imitation of the greatest perfection that nature produced, and ideal beauty itself, could not depict in more admirable forms this goddess whom Lucretius named delight of men and gods[2]In 1865, Ernest Roschach[3] instead identifies it to a depiction of Diana: It might as well be seen as Diana.

It even seems that the proud beauty of the face and the energic development of the neck muscles would rather justify this attribution and hint at the chaste goddess, accustomed to running in the woods and take deep inbreaths of the fotrifying air of the mountains.

Vénus de Martres (de face, gros plan), MSR, Musée Saint-Raymond
Front view