19th and 20th Century Sculpture

19th and 20th Century Sculpture

全螢幕檢視 - 查看8ITALIAN OR FRENCH, 19TH CENTURY, AFTER THE ANTIQUE | SLEEPING HERMAPHRODITE的1

ITALIAN OR FRENCH, 19TH CENTURY, AFTER THE ANTIQUE | SLEEPING HERMAPHRODITE

拍賣已結束

December 11, 11:50 AM GMT

估價

8,000 - 12,000 GBP

拍品資料

Read in English
Read in English

描述

ITALIAN OR FRENCH, 19TH CENTURY

AFTER THE ANTIQUE

SLEEPING HERMAPHRODITE


white marble, on a veined black marble base and columned wood plinth

figure: 14 by 61 by 30cm., 5½ by 24 by 11¾in.

black marble base: 5 by 63 by 33cm., 2 by 24¾ by 13in.

wood plinth: 109 by 65 by 35cm., 42⅞ by 25⅝ by 13¾in.

'Sex to sweet sex with lips and limbs is wed' are the words with which Swinburne enshrined the iconic Sleeping Hermaphrodite in his poetry. Discovered in Rome before 1620, the ancient Roman marble - after a presumed Hellenistic bronze - was famously restored by Gianlorenzo Bernini, who added the quilted mattress upon which the sleeping figure rests. The Hermaphrodite was installed in the Villa Borghese as part of Cardinal Scipione Borghe's collection by 1638 and soon rose to fame as one of the most celebrated marbles in Rome. Its subject is Hermaphroditos, the son of Aphrodite and Hermes, whose form was merged with that of a water nymph, resulting in his androgynous status, which is laid bare in the statue. Viewers in the 17th and 18th centuries were inevitably compelled by the titillating compositon, with reactions ranging from distaste and shame to admiration and amusement. Lady Townshend quipped that the model represented 'the only happy couple she ever saw' (Haskell and Penny, op. cit., p. 235). The statue's fame resulted in the commissioning of various copies, of which some omit the vital addition of the penis. Though frequently copied in bronze, reductions in marble are more rare. Purchased by Napoleon in 1807, the Borghese Hermaphrodite is now among the main attractions of ancient statuary at the musée du Louvre, eclipsing in fame a number of other Roman versions of the subject. 


RELATED LITERATURE

F. Haskell and N. Penny, Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture, 1500-1900, London, 1981, pp. 234-235