Some wall paintings, sculpture, and internal furnishings survive.
Although these once did exist, no sculptures of Caesonia and Drusilla survive.
Anthropomorphic sculpture itself was extraordinarily rare and few examples survive till today.
As a result, most of his work from this period was destroyed, and only a small collection of his early large oil paintings, portraits, and sculptures survived.
Sixty-nine original sculptures in wax and mixed-media survived the casting process.
More than one ancient Roman sculpture has survived with the name of one of these craftsmen incised in it.
Local villagers have relied on them as shelter during monsoons or epidemics, so the murals have disappeared, but the magnificent sculpture has survived.
Art from the tomb is important because little sculpture from that era has survived.
These are almost the only paintings from the classical world that have survived, apart from frescos, though many sculptures survive, and portraits on coins.
The original sculpture on the wall has not survived, but was restored several times, most recently in the 19th century.