The statue is 1.05 m (41 in) tall, approximately one twelfth the estimated height of the original.[2] It is carved of pentelic marble and bears traces of red and yellow paint. Athena is dressed in a peplos belted with a zone in the form of two snakes; over this she wears the aegis, decorated with snakes and with the gorgoneion in the center.[2] She wears an Attic helmet with the cheek guards upturned; it has three crests, the center sporting a sphinx and those on the sides a pegasus.[1][2] Her left hand rests on the rim of a shield which also bears the gorgoneion; the shield rests against the oikouros ophis (guardian snake) identified with Erichthonios, the city's legendary founder.[1] The outstretched right hand is supported by a column and holds a winged figure of Nike, the head of which is missing.[3] This smaller image is likewise garbed in a peplos and is turned somewhat towards the main figure.[3] The whole assemblage rests on a rectangular base.[2]
Differences from the original
Certain differences between the original as described by Pausanias and Pliny may be noted. The original base was decorated with a frieze showing the birth of Pandora, whereas the copy is plain; Pausanias also describes a spear which the copy lacks. The shield lacks the amazonomachy on the front which Pliny describes.[2] The presence of the column is cited by many in the argument over whether the original required a similar support, though many reconstructions omit it (e.g. that in the Nashville Parthenon).[3]
Discovery
The statue is named for the locale of its discovery in 1880,[3] in the ruins of a Roman house near the original site of the Varvakeion School.[1][4]
^ abcdHarrison, Evelyn B. (1996). "Pheidias". In Palagia, Olga; Pollitt, J. J. (eds.). Personal Styles in Greek Sculpture. Yale Classical Studies. Vol. XXX. Cambridge University Press. pp. 42–51. ISBN9780521657389. Retrieved 2016-06-29.
^Mikalson, Jon D.; et al. (2021). Ancient Greek Religion. John Wiley. ISBN978-1-119-56562-8. The Varvakeion Athena […] was found in 1880 in the ruins of a Roman house near the Varvakeion Lyceum in central Athens.