A life-sized statue of this figure shows him with copper inlaid lips and is likely an archaic forgery based on an incorrect inscription. A terracotta statue of this figure from the roof of the Portonaccio Temple originally was a complement to one of Hercules, attributed to the Etruscan Vulca. A contrapposto statue of this figure was shown in prints by Antonio Lafreri and Marcantonio Raimondi. (*) Kouros sculptures were initially thought to represent this figure, the subject of a sculpture modified by Giovanni Angelo Montorsoli to fix broken arms and alter a tree trunk with a snake slithering up it. The Vatican houses Leochares’s sculpture of this figure, who has sculptures from Veii (“VAY-ee”) and Belvedere. For 10 points, name this Greco-Roman god often depicted alongside his twin Artemis. ■END■
ANSWER: Apollo [accept Apulu or Aplu]
<Benjamin McAvoy-Bickford, Visual Fine Arts>
= Average correct buzz position