Though its subject is unathletic in build, the work was a brilliant success thanks to its composition's "beautiful surrender of movement" and its "very fresh" execution, so much so that consul Tambroni said "there are many young students in Rome, of whom we have high hopes, and first among them is the Venetian Hayez". He turns his head to the left side of the work whilst walking towards its right, showing his flexible body covered in chiaroscuro and with his pink flesh tones set off by a brown robe billowing behind him. An abandoned discus at bottom left suggests he is a discobolus. The subject holds a palm branch of victory just after descending in triumph from a chariot, which is shown in the background below a number of fluted Doric columns. The work shows a nude man with no surrounding figures, thus directly competing with sculptures by Hellenistic artists such as the Apollo Belvedere and works by Canova himself. It was one of the artist's first works to receive public acclaim and won the Mecenate Anonimo competition set up by Antonio Canova, which required competitors to produce "a life-size painting of a nude". Mazzocca, Fernando, Pittura di storia e melodramma: i dipinti di Francesco Hayez su I due Foscari, in: I due Foscari (I quaderni del Festival Verdi, 3). It was produced a year after the painter's victory ex aequo in a competition organised by the Accademia milanese di Brera. The Victorious Athlete or The Triumphant Athlete (Italian - Atleta trionfante) is an 1813 oil-on-canvas painting by the Italian artist Francesco Hayez, now in the Accademia di San Luca in Rome. The Victorious Athlete (1813) by Francesco Hayez
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