European Art: Paintings & Sculpture
European Art: Paintings & Sculpture
Lot Closed
June 18, 03:35 PM GMT
Estimate
6,000 - 8,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
AFTER ANTONIO CANOVA (1757-1822)
ITALIAN, CIRCA 1830
VENUS ITALICA
white marble
86cm., 33⅞in.
To view Shipping Calculator, please click here
When the Medici Venus was forcibly removed from the Tribuna of the Uffizi by Napoleon's forces, King Louis I of Etruria commissioned Antonio Canova to replace the figure. True to nature, Canova submitted a wholly original figure to rival the antiquity, despite originally being asked to sculpt a copy. Canova's Venus references the Medici Venus in the turn of the neck, but leans slightly forward, adding greater finesse to the proportioning of the figure. The Neoclassical composition also incorporates drapery which is used by Venus to conceal her nudity. This is a distinctly modern gesture, which imbues the figure with a sensuality also seen in seminal contemporary paintings such as Ingres' Valpinçon Bather and Hayez' Venus. The Venus Italica became an instant success when it was unveiled in the Palazzo Pitti in 1812. Canova subsequently made a number of versions, including examples for the Marquess of Lansdowne, the Marquess of Londonderry and, ironically, for Napoleon’s brother Lucien.
RELATED LITERATURE
M. Praz (ed.), L'Opera Completa di Canova, Milan, 1966, figs 98, 99, 100, 168, 170 and 171; H. Honour, 'Canova's Statues of Venus', Burlington Magazine, volume 114, October 1972, pp. 658-671; H.Honour, 'Canova's Studio Practice-II: 1792-1822', Burlington Magazine, vol. 114, April 1972, pp. 214-229; N. Bettucchi (ed.), Canova all'Ermitage. Le sculpture del museo di San Pietroburgo, Venice, 1991, pp. 92-99; P. Corbett, 'Imbued with a sort of infinity. The sculpture of Canova', Apollo, August 1992, pp. 120-122; O. Stefani, Antonio Canova. La statuaria, Milan, 1999, pp. 71-77, no. 5