Smoke Test on 01-12-2025

Around 2,500 years ago, a new style emerged among the sculptors of ancient Greece. Described by the pioneering archaeologist Johann Winckelmann as ‘taken from thin and wet garments, which of course clasped the body, and discovered the shape’, it is now known as ‘wet drapery’. ‘The technique employs highly stylised folds of fabric that cling to the body and flutter behind it to accentuate undulating muscles or curves, and give an impression of forward movement against a breeze,’ says Rowena Field. Like those works, this marble torso is a rare surviving example of Greek wet drapery — later Roman copies are much more common. The subject’s fabric clings to her torso in beautiful swirls, with a remarkable tension that reveals more than it conceals. ‘The weighty stone has been transformed into delicate ripples, and the result is equally masterful and erotic,’ adds Field.
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