The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Greek workshop recreates ancient masterpiec­es

- By Thanassis Stavrakis

It might be the closest an artist can get to time travel: Painstakin­gly recreating the sculptures of Greece’s ancient masters.

A group of artists working for Athens’ Culture Ministry has the exclusive right to make the officially certified copies, which are meant for sale in Greek museum shops.

“The standard is very high. And every artist tries to emulate what was done by the artist in ancient times,” supervisor Stelios Gavalas, a sculptor by training, told The Associated Press. “For us, it is a very big honor to have daily contact with works of the great artists of antiquity.”

The team of about 50 fine arts graduates works on a range of sculptures, from a three-inch (nearly eight-centimeter) hare from Roman-era Macedonia to a seven-foot (more than two-meter) statue of Zeus, or Poseidon, made in the mid-5th century B.C. and one of the star exhibits of the National Archaeolog­ical Museum in Athens.

All are full-scale, made out of plaster in molds and painstakin­gly hand-painted to match the hues of the original piece, be it metal, marble, clay or even ivory. Plaster is used because it doesn’t shrink while drying, unlike other materials such as resin, and allows reproducti­ons that are completely accurate in size.

Casts are made in the museums where the originals are kept, and the ensuing moulds are stored in the workshop, together with more than a thousand prototype copies, some dating from the late 19th century.

Each reproducti­on can take days to complete, with the mid5th century B.C. Zeus, or Poseidon, requiring nearly two months from beginning to end, including the time required for the plaster to dry. That copy sits near the top of the price range, costing 3,000 euros ($3,700).

For the time being, the copies can only be bought at major museums and archaeolog­ical sites. The proceeds are meant to help fund Greek archaeolog­y and conservati­on projects.

Culture Minister Lydia Koniordou promised at a recent news conference that by the summer they will also be available for online purchase. Online: Greek Culture Ministry Fund of Archaeolog­ical Proceeds, which makes and sells the copies: http://www.tap.gr/tapadb/ index.php/en/products/originalco­pies/casts A sculptor cleans a copy of the head of Hygeia, deity of health, in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens. A 50-strong team of fine arts graduates working for the Culture Ministry produce top-quality, officially certified copies of ancient masterpiec­es in the country’s museums. A sculptor paints a plaster replica of the seven-foot bronze statue of Zeus, or Poseidon, made in the mid-5th century B.C. in the Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens.

 ?? PHOTOS BY THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Plaster replicas of Hygeia, ancient deity of health, are placed on a shelf storage in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens.
PHOTOS BY THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Plaster replicas of Hygeia, ancient deity of health, are placed on a shelf storage in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens.
 ??  ?? A worker places a copy of the head of Kouros in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens. Plaster replicas of Cycladic figurines are placed on a shelf storage in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens.
A worker places a copy of the head of Kouros in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens. Plaster replicas of Cycladic figurines are placed on a shelf storage in Culture Ministry’s Lab in Athens.
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