EUPHRANOR, of Corinth (dated by Pliny in 364 B.c.), a Greek artist who excelled both as a sculptor and as a painter. In Pliny we have lists of his works; among the paintings, a cavalry battle, a Theseus, and the feigned madness of Odysseus ; among the statues, Paris, Leto with her children Apollo and Artemis, Philip and Alexander in chariots. Unfortunately we are unable among existing statues to identify any as copies from works of Euphranor (for attempts to do so cf. Six in Jahrbuch, 1909, 7 ff., and Furtwangler, Masterpieces pp. 348 ff.). He appears to have resembled Lysippus, in his preference for bodily forms slighter than those usual in earlier art, and in his love of heroic subjects. He wrote books on proportion and colour.