Marble relief with a dancing maenad

Adaptation of work attributed to Kallimachos
ca. 27 BCE–14 CE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 153
Copy of a Greek relief of ca. 425–400 B.C. attributed to Kallimachos

Maenads were mythical women inspired by the god of wine, Dionysos, to abandon their homes and families and roam the mountains and forests, singing and dancing in a state of ecstatic frenzy. This figure, wearing an ivy wreath and carrying a thyrsos (fennel stalk) bedecked with ivy leaves and berries, moves forward, trancelike, her drapery swirling about her. She was copied from a famous relief of dancing maenads dated to the late fifth century B.C., when Euripides portrayed the manic devotées of Dionysos in his play the Bacchae.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Marble relief with a dancing maenad
  • Artist: Adaptation of work attributed to Kallimachos
  • Period: Early Imperial, Augustan
  • Date: ca. 27 BCE–14 CE
  • Culture: Roman
  • Medium: Marble, Pentelic
  • Dimensions: H. 56 5/16 in. (143 cm)
  • Classification: Stone Sculpture
  • Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1935
  • Object Number: 35.11.3
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

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Cover Image for 1049. Marble relief with a dancing maenad

1049. Marble relief with a dancing maenad

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This relief shows a maenad, a female follower of Dionysos, god of wine. The maenad is someone who is especially susceptible to the divine frenzy Dionysos inspires through wine. In the relief, she is dancing to some hypnotic music we can only imagine. As she dances, the fabric of her dress moves with her; look at the rippling movement of the hem above her feet. The dress is fanciful, but highly expressive. In some places it clings tightly to her body; in others, it flutters in artful patterns.

While this maenad dances, she bows her heavy-looking head and seems not to see out of her eyes; there is something very serious about her experience of Dionysos. In Euripides’ tragedy Bacchae, women possessed by Dionysos dance with vigor. They also tear animals apart and dismember Pentheus, the king of Thebes who refused to welcome the god into his city. Euripides describes them in this lyric:

When the ebony flute, melodious/ and sacred, plays the holy song / and thunderously incites the rush of women /to mountain, to mountain, / then, in delight, like a colt with its mother / at pasture, she frolics, a light-footed Bacchant.

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