A Triton from the second facade of the Roman Odeion, ca. A.D. 150-175, illustrates the continuity of scultpural practice in the Agora. The torso of the Triton was strongly influenced by one of the fugures in the east Pediment of the 5th-century B.C. Parthenon. The Triton was later reused in the 5th-century A.D. structure that occupied the site of the Odeion, probably a gymnasium.
View of the central part of the Agora site looking south, July 1950, showing the completed concervation work on the Odeion. The Giants of the Odeion are visible in the middle and behind is the Church of the Holy Apostles before restoration. To the left is the southern portion of the Stoa of Attalos before restoration.
Corinthian capital from the Odeion of Agrippa, found in 1890/1 in the cutting of the trench for the Athens-Piraeus electric railroad. Now standing on the terrace of the Middle Stoa. NM 1469.