Tags: Artwork.
Pasquino or Pasquin (Latin: Pasquillus) is the name used by Romans since the Early modern period to describe a battered Hellenistic-style statue dating to the 3rd century BC which was unearthed in the Parione district of Rome in the 15th century. The statue’s fame dates to the early 16th century when Cardinal Oliviero Carafa draped the marble torso of the statue in a toga and decorated it with Latin epigrams on the occasion of Saint Mark’s Day.