• Hamiaux suggests that the Venus de Milo is of the same sculptural type as the Capuan Venus and another sculpture of Aphrodite from Perge.
  • The Venus de Milo statue is one of antiquity’s most famous emblems, appearing in countless spoofs and pop culture references.
  • The Venus de Milo has the incongruous distinction of being one of the most well-known objects in art and yet it remains an enigma.
  • The Venus de Milo can be admired today in the last of a long series of rooms where she stands in almost solitary splendour.
  • Venus de MiloVenus de Milo, marble statue thought to be of Aphrodite, from Melos, c. 150 bce; in the Louvre, Paris.
  • For much of the world, the mystery of the Venus de Milo lies in its missing arms. But there’s much more to this iconic statue than a couple of absent appendages.
  • Different proposals of how the Venus de Milo would look like with her arms, holding an apple or writing on a shield.
  • The name Venus de Milo comes from Venus, the Roman name for Aphrodite, and Milos, the Greek island where the statue was discovered in 1820.
  • Venus de Milo‘s uniquely carved right arm hung across the torso, with the right hand resting on the raised left knee, gripping the drapery draped over the legs...
  • Venus de Milo daha doğrusu Milos, Yunanistan adasında 1820 yılında keşfedildi Helenistik döneme gelen antik bir Yunan heykeli vardır.