The Lansdowne Heracles is a Roman marble sculpture of about 125 CE. Today it is in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum's Getty Villa on the Malibu Coast, Los Angeles. The statue represents the hero Heracles as a beardless Lysippic youth grasping the skin of the Nemean lion with his club upon his shoulder. The work was discovered in 1790 in Tivoli, Italy, on the site of Hadrian's Villa, where many fine Hadrianic copies and pastiches of Greek sculptures had been discovered since the 16th century. Today, the sculpture is considered to be an example of Roman-era improvisations on the Greek sculptural style of the fourth century BCE rather than a copy of a specific Greek original.


  • Note: Our products are light because they are 3D printing products. It is not possible to estimate the weight of the product from its appearance, in most cases it can be surprising when the product is held. Generally, they are under 500 grams. Weight could be added according to your request, but in this case, it will be required an extra shipping fee.
  • All our products are photographed after production. The photos you see are not digital imitations.
  • -This product was produced with PLA by 3D printer, painted and polished by hand. The product which is going to be sent is that in the photo. For different sizes and colors please contact with us.
  • Which process do you use after 3D printing?
After 3D printing, the object doesn't seem soft and if it doesn't be rubbed down, the surface couldn't be covered with painting smoothly and it will be an awful-looking object. For avoiding it, firstly, we rub down the objects, apply undercoat, painting by hand and lastly polish for making it permanent.