拍品专文
The iconography of this figure is enigmatic. While the face is clearly that of Papposilenus, the paidagogos (tutor) of Dionysus, it may be that an actor is depicted. For a nearly identical figure but shown wearing a pointed cap, see the figure in Vienna, pl. 33, 4 in E.F. von Sacken, Die antiken Bronzen des K.K. Münz- und Antiken-Cabinetes in Wien; for a cloaked but not hooded Papposilenus shouldering a goat, see no. 24 in J. Petit, Bronzes Antiques de la collection Dutuit. The style of the face is similar to that on a Papposilenus furniture support now in the Israel Museum, no. 98 in O.W. Muscarella, ed., Ancient Art: The Norbert Schimmel Collection. The form of the cloak further recalls depictions of Telesphoros, the son of Asklepios (see, for example, pp. 870-878 in H. Rühfel, "Telesphoros," LIMC, vol. VII).
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