
Apóllōn through the eyes of sculptors, painters, and craftsmen across the ages

Apollo Belvedere — Roman copy of a Greek original by Leochares, c. 330 BCE. The ideal of male beauty and divine composure.

Apollo Belvedere (full) — The god stands in contrapposto, having just released an arrow from his bow.

Apollo Lykeios — The god rests on a support, a mantle draped over his arm. Found at the Lyceum gymnasium in Athens.

Apollo Sauroktonos — Praxiteles, c. 350 BCE. The young god leans against a tree, about to spear a lizard.

Temple of Apollo at Delphi — The omphalos, the navel of the world. Where the Pythia spoke prophecy.

Apollo and Daphne — Gian Lorenzo Bernini, 1622–25. Marble transformed into living flesh, bark, and laurel leaves.

Apollo Slaying Python — Attic red-figure pelike, c. 460 BCE. The god avenges his mother by killing the serpent.
Apollo Citharoedus — The lyre-player. Music so perfect it could charm stones and bend the will of gods.

Apollo — Roman copy, Hermitage Museum. The archer god, perfect in form, terrible in wrath.