Venus used to have hands, and the most popular ones were holding apples, mirrors, long hair or holding babies. But the author thinks that Venus with hands is not as beautiful as Venus without hands, so she removes her arms. In fact, this Venus has no arms since it was unearthed. Many people wanted to help her put on the armband, but they found that Venus with armband was not as beautiful as Venus without armband, so they didn't put on the armband for her.
100 for more than a year, many sculptors have tried to restore her arm, but in any case, there is a feeling of gilding the lily, which is not as beautiful as when she broke her arm. "Brokeback" casts a mysterious color on this sculpture, and also adds icing on the cake to her incomplete beauty. Venus's broken arm has become a mystery in the history of world art, and perhaps this mystery will never be answered.
Extended data:
The origin of Venus:
Venus was originally an Italian goddess. Her name may be synonymous with green vegetables. At first, she was an elf in the orchard, which made the orchard harvest. Orchard workers will have a holiday to celebrate Vignaria Festival. Her Roman alias, Muir Teia, may be derived from the Latin peach tree or guava tree, representing her status as the goddess of the orchard. At the same time, she was also the personification of "God's grace" at first.
Because of the spread of Aeneas myth in Rome in the later period, Venus was regarded by the Romans as the Greek goddess Aphrodite, so Venus became the goddess of beauty and love in the later period. At the same time, Pompeii built the Temple of Venus Victrix, and Venus also corresponds to the goddess of victory. At the same time, the Egyptian and Near Eastern goddesses Isis and Ashtar are also related to Venus.
Venus has aliases such as "compassion", "do no evil", "immediately" and "decadence", which means that Roman women cut off their hair and made ropes for the army to use when fighting Gaul.
Later, influenced by Aphrodite, Rome also created some related legends for Venus.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Venus