Calamis (fl.
5th century BC) was a
sculptor of
ancient Greece. He was possibly from
Boeotia, but nothing certain is known of his life. He is known to have worked in
marble,
bronze,
gold, and
ivory, and was famed for
statues of
horses. According to
Pausanias (9.16.1), Calamis produced a statue of
Zeus Ammon for
Pindar, and mentions a
Hermes Criophorus for
Tanagra (9.22.1), which was later depicted on Roman
coinage of the city. His statue of
Apollo Alexikakos stood in the
Ceramicus of
Athens. He produced his most ambitious work, a 30-cubit statue of
Apollo for
Apollonius Pontica (on modern
St. Ivan Island,
Bulgaria;
Pliny the Elder 34.29,
Strabo 7.319). His
Sosandra was praised by
Lucian, and may have been copied for
Aspasia, which in turn was copied by the Romans.