<P> The Louros type is a category of Cycladic figurines from the Early Cycladic I phase of the Bronze Age . Combining the naturalistic and schematic approaches of earlier figure styles, the Louros type have featureless faces, a long neck, and a simple body with attenuated shoulders that tend to extend past the hips in width . The legs are shaped carefully but are carved to separation no further than the knees or mid-calves . Though breasts are not indicated, figures of this type are still suggestive of the female form and tend to bear evidence of a carved pubic triangle . </P> <P> The Kapsala variety is a type of Cycladic figure of the Early Cycladic II period . This variety is often thought to precede or overlap in period with that of the canonical Spedos variety of figures . Kapsala figures differ with the canonical type in that the arms are held much lower in the right - below - left folded configuration and the faces lack sculpted features other than the nose and occasionally ears . Kapsala figures show a tendency of slenderness, especially in the legs, which are much longer and lack the powerful musculature suggested in earlier forms of the sculptures . The shoulders and hips are much narrower as well, and the figures themselves are very small in size, rarely larger than 30cm in length . Evidence suggests that paint is now regularly used to demarcate features such as the eyes and pubic triangle, rather than carving them directly . One characteristic of note of the Kapsala variety is that some figures seem to suggest pregnancy, featuring bulging stomachs with lines drawn across the abdomen . Like other figures of the Early Cycladic II period, the most defining feature of the Kapsala variety is their folded - arm position . </P> <P> The Spedos type, named after an Early Cycladic cemetery on Naxos, is the most common of Cycladic figurine types . It has the widest distribution within the Cyclades as well as elsewhere, and the greatest longevity . The group as a whole includes figurines ranging in height from miniature examples of 8 cm to monumental sculptures of 1.5 m . With the exception of a statue of a male figure, now in the Museum of Cycladic Art Collection, all known works of the Spedos variety are female figures . Spedos figurines are typically slender elongated female forms with folded arms . They are characterized by U-shaped heads and a deeply incised cleft between the legs . </P> <P> The Dokathismata type is a Cycladic figure from the end of the Early Cycladic II period of the Bronze Age . With characteristics that are developed from the earlier Spedos variety, the Dokathismata figures feature broad, angular shoulders and a straight profile . Dokathismata figures are considered the most stylized of the folded - arm figures, with a long, elegant shape that displays a strong sense of geometry that is especially evident in the head, which features an almost triangular shape . These figures were somewhat conservatively built compared to earlier varieties, with a shallow leg cleft and connected feet . Despite this, the figures were actually quite fragile and prone to breakage . The return of an incised pubic triangle is also noted in the Dokathismata variety of figures . </P>

What is the most common subject of cycladic sculptures