WHERE: Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, Georgia.
WHEN: Thursday, March 28, at 5:30 pm in the M. Smith Griffith Auditorium.
BRIEF ABOUT: A panel discussion with Mark Abbe, UGA assistant professor of ancient art; Tina Salguero, UGA assistant professor of chemistry; and Jeff Speakman, associate director of UGA’s Center for Applied Isotope Studies, on the current technical study of the Orpheus Relief sculpture that has been on loan to GMOA from the University of Mississippi Museum since September 2012.
The sculpture depicts Hermes, the Greek messenger god. This relief fragment originally was a part of a three-figure composition of Hermes escorting Eurydice to the Underworld, her final parting from Orpheus. It is this larger composition that is known as the Orpheus Relief and is one of the most celebrated examples of Greek sculpture from the High Classical period, ca. 450–400 B.C.
MORE DETAILS: Call 706.542.4662 or www.georgiamuseum.org.