Tisicrates of Sicyon
Tisicrates was a sculptor from Sicyon. Ancient sources associate him with the school of Lysippus, and Pliny the Elder introduces him in a way that leaves some uncertainty over whether he was a pupil of Lysippus himself or of Lysippus's son Euthycrates. Most writers, however, list him as a disciple of Euthycrates.
Ancient writers describe his style as close to that of Lysippus. According to Pliny the Elder, several of Tisicrates statues were so similar to those of Lysippus that they were difficult to tell apart.
Tisicrates was also the father of the painter Arcesilaus, and either he or Euthycrates was the teacher of Xenokrates of Sicyon.
His excellence was especially noted in equestrian groups, and Pliny remarks of the statue of Peucestes that he was "dignus tanta gloria".
Pliny mentions the below works by Tisicrates:
- Aged Theban
- King Demetrius
- Peucestes
- A two-horse chariot, and later the artist Piston added a woman to it.
A marble sculpture found near Albano bears the signature "ΤΕΙΣΙΚΡΑΤΗΣ ΕΠΟΙΕΙ", which may indicate a second sculptor named Tisicrates. Scholar M. Raoul-Rochette considered it almost certainly a different individual. However, it is also possible that the marble is simply a copy of a bronze work by the Tisicrates of Sicyon. The spelling ΤΕΙΣΙΚΡΑΤΗΣ is a known variant in Greek names and therefore does not, by itself, prove that it refers to a different sculptor.