The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Have they lost their marbles?

A horse’s head carved out of stone by a robot in a bid to make an entire replica of Elgin sculptures. Could it end long-running diplomatic feud, or...

- By Simon de Bruxelles

IT IS one of the most significan­t artworks of antiquity – a lifelike marble sculpture of a horse’s head which, 2,500 years ago, adorned the facade of the Parthenon in Athens.

The figure, known as Selene’s Stallion, is so revered that it was the inspiratio­n for the knight chess piece used in internatio­nal tournament­s. But the sculpture has also been a pawn in a diplomatic war of words, as the horse is a highlight of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum – and the Greek government is demanding them back.

Now Selene’s Stallion has been given a leading role in the campaign for their return – hence the visually perfect copy pictured here. It is a prototype for an entire replica set of Parthenon Sculptures, versions which are so exact that they could strengthen Greece’s case for the British Museum to relinquish its possession of the originals.

The idea is that the museum display the replicas instead.

The new stallion was made by a £250,000 robotic sculptor armed with metal chisels in Italy.

Said to have the strength of a bulldozer and the precision of a brain surgeon, the robotic arm shaped the marble far faster than any human sculptor could, and can carve a rough copy of the head in less than 24 hours.

The finished version took longer as every detail of the original, including flaws, chips, stains and chisel marks, was replicated.

The work took place at the Robotor workshop in Carrara, Tuscany.

Researcher­s from the Oxfordbase­d Institute of Digital Archaeolog­y have used technology incorporat­ed into the latest iPads to scan the original statues in the British Museum for the robot to copy.

Each Marble will cost between an estimated £40,000 and £150,000, depending on the size.

In fact, there will soon be two copies of the stallion: this test piece in Carrara marble, and a second using marble brought from what little is left at the quarry on Mount Pentelicus, just north of Athens, from where the original’s stone came.

Pentelic marble has a distinctiv­e pink hue caused by iron deposits.

Carving of the second head is due to begin tomorrow and is expected to take five days. Both replicas are soon to be exhibited in London.

The head of Selene’s Stallion is among dozens of sculptures and panels that make up the Elgin Marbles – so called because they were taken by Scottish nobleman Thomas Bruce, the 7th Lord Elgin. He used his influence as British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, which then occupied Athens, to ship the treasures to Broomhall, his stately home near Dunfermlin­e, between 1802 and 1812.

Shortly after they were acquired from Elgin, British Museum staff tried to polish the sculptures back to what they incorrectl­y believed was their original pristine whiteness.

Former Chancellor George Osborne, who is now chairman of the British Museum’s trustees, said recently that there is ‘a deal to be done’ with the Greek government.

That could one day involve the British Museum returning the original Marbles to Athens and instead displaying perfect replicas as they would have appeared in antiquity.

Due to their symbolic importance to the Greek nation, Athens remains adamant that only the return of the originals, damaged as they are, would ever be acceptable.

 ?? ?? SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: The Parthenon Marbles on display in London, and right, the trial copy of the horse’s head being sculpted by the £250,000 robotic arm at a workshop in Carrara, Tuscany
SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: The Parthenon Marbles on display in London, and right, the trial copy of the horse’s head being sculpted by the £250,000 robotic arm at a workshop in Carrara, Tuscany
 ?? ?? ANCIENT: The original Selene’s Stallion head at the British Museum
ANCIENT: The original Selene’s Stallion head at the British Museum

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