{"id":3520,"title":"The Doryphoros (after Polykleitos)","medium":"Pentelic marble","classification":"Sculpture","dimension":"78 x 19 x 19 in. (198.12 x 48.26 x 48.26 cm)","object_name":"Roman copy of a Greek bronze statue of c. 450-440 BCE","nationality":"Roman","culture":"Roman","dated":"27 BCE–68 CE","room":"G241","list":"sculpture-highlights, Euro-highlights-pre-1800","role":"Artist","creditline":"The John R. Van Derlip Fund and Gift of funds from Bruce B. Dayton, an anonymous donor, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. W. John Driscoll, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. John Andrus, Mr. and Mrs. Judson Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Keating, Mr. and Mrs. Pierce McNally, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne MacFarlane, and many other generous friends of the Institute","accession_number":"86.6","artist":"Copy of work attributed to Polykleitos","life_date":"Greek, active 460–415 BCE","department":"European Art","rights_type":"Public Domain","image_width":5428,"image_height":7230,"recent":0,"see_also":[],"sort_number":"86     6","image":"valid","public_access":1,"curator_approved":1,"highlights":0,"Cache_Location":"003000\\500\\20\\3520","Primary_RenditionNumber":"mia_4000977.jpg","Rights_Image_Display":"Full","list:sculpture-highlights":true,"list:euro-highlights-pre-1800":true,"related:audio-stops":[{"title":"Doryphoros","_id":"3520","objectId":"3520","link":"http://audio-tours.s3.amazonaws.com/p301.mp3","number":"301","type":"audio"}],"related:3dmodels":[{"title":"Mia's Doryphoros","_id":"3520","objectId":"3520","link":"https://sketchfab.com/models/8a54983061b74de4bf8b7ca2aca25990","type":"3d","thumb":"https://dg5bepmjyhz9h.cloudfront.net/urls/8a54983061b74de4bf8b7ca2aca25990/dist/thumbnails/56a0e82b8ea541daa346b4689679bbbb/640x360.jpeg"}],"related:artstories":[{"title":"Doryphoros","_id":"3520","objectId":"3520","description":"<p>The ideal body. We all want it, and our never-ending struggle to get it sells magazines and gym memberships and Spanx (when we finally give up). Ideals of beauty vary between cultures, but the idea of the ideal is in everyone’s nature. Thousands of years ago, the celebrated Greek sculptor Polykleitos argued that the human ideal could be distilled down to numbers, and offered The Doryphoros, or Spear Bearer, as the perfect man, reflecting mathematically precise proportions. This is one of the four surviving Roman copies of the Greek original, now lost. </p>","link":"http://artstories.artsmia.org/#/o/3520","type":"artstory"}],"mtime":"2026-03-13T09:00:09.514Z"}