Page:An Elementary History of Art.djvu/236

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

206 Etruscan Sculpture. Louvre, and that of the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, contain many curious specimens. Terra-cotta objects are also very numerous. Perhaps the most interesting is that called the Lydian Tomb, found at Caere (the modern Cervetri, a corruption of Caere Vetere), and now in the Louvre. It represents a married couple in a semi-recumbent position upon an Assyrian couch. The attitudes are stiff, the treatment of the figures betrays Fig. 86. — Relief from an Etruscan tomb. ignorance of anatomy, and the drapery is wanting in grace ; but with all these faults the group is pleasing and characteristic. The pediments of Etruscan temples appear to have been adorned with terra-cotta reliefs, and the images of the gods were often of the same material. In Rome, before Greek influence became predominant, Etruscan terra-cotta was largely employed. The pediment of the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol was adorned with