• The Venus de' Medici or Medici Venus is a 1.53 m (5 ft 0 in) tall Hellenistic marble sculpture depicting the Greek goddess of love Aphrodite.
  • ...the beginning of 1816, when, to comply with the Treaty of Vienna, it returned to Florence (AGU 1816 XL - no. 12, Statue of Venus de' Medici returned from Paris.
  • Venus deMedici was her name. And for centuries she would stand, unmoving and serene, as crowds gathered around to admire her every feature.
  • Origin: The Venus de' Medici is a renowned ancient Greek statue that dates to the late Hellenistic period, around the 1st century BCE.
  • Medici Venus (c. 1699-1702) by Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi, after antiquity, an object of LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna.
  • Venus de' Medici Hellenistic marble copy of an earlier bronze original displayed in the Tribuna of the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.
  • Aunque esto no significaba que Florencia renunciara a su Venus de Medici y, en 1816 consigue recuperar la escultura y devolverla a los Uffizi.
  • This item is based on the Venus De' Medici, a Hellenistic Greek marble statue which was considered a symbol of ancient beauty during the Neoclassical period.
  • There, gracefully disposed about the floor, stands the world-renowned Venus deMedici, the Arrotino, or grinder, a perfect piece of nature in both form and action...
  • ...නම් ඇතීනියානුවා විසින් නිර්මිත ප්‍රතිමාව; patông; Venus de Medici; メディチのウェヌス; මෙඩිචි වීනස්; Medici Venus</nowiki>.
  • Medium. ... When he was in Rome in 1828, Turner made a rapid outline study in oils (Tate N05509) 1 of a figure similar to that of the Venus deMedici, or the...
  • Venus de Medici (Venus Pudica) c.1610-36. Bronze | 152.3 cm (Height) (figure) | RCIN 39715. Upper Orangery, Hampton Court Palace.
  • The ' Medici Venus, or as it is often called Venus de Medici, there was considered a miracle of art.