At 11 metres high, the quadriga stands out imposingly against the Roman skyline.
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11 metres high and made entirely of bronze, the Quadriga of Liberty is the work of the Roman sculptor, Paolo Bartolini (1859-1930). After winning the special competition in 1907, Bartolini began working on the piece in 1909. However, final delivery and assembly of the work of art were not completed until 1927.
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The Liberty is represented as a Victory with outstretched wings, her head surrounded by a band, known as a taenia, a laurel wreath in one hand and a spear in the other; she is standing on a chariot pulled by four majestic horses. The model for the female figure is the Lemnian Athena, which, since antiquity, has been considered the masterpiece of the great Greek sculptor, Fidia: Bartolini was able to study it closely through a cast of the preserved copy in Dresden.
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