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Nikandre Kore (650 BC, Naxos) was discovered at the sanctuary of Artemis on Delos. It is one of the earliest known statues to depict women in a life-size scale from the previous Geometric statuettes.
kore, type of freestanding statue of a maiden—the female counterpart of the kouros, or standing youth—that appeared with the beginning of Greek monumental sculpture in about 660 bc and remained to the end of the Archaic period in about 500 bc.
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Archaic Greek statues depicting youths are referred to with modern designated terms: Kouros (Kouroi plural) for the unbearded male youths and Kore (Korai plural) for young maidens. Made of marble or limestone, the statues tend to be life-size.
Korai statues are the female equivalent of Kouros. There are several distinct differences between the two, with the most significant one being the fact that kouros statues were almost always portrayed in the nude, while kore were always clothed.
The Kore was discovered in 1886 in the so-called "Korai Pit" northwest of the Erechtheion. She was found in many fragments and was later reassembled. The Kore stands on a plinth carved out of the same block of marble.