Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Cupid and Psyche, Farnese Bull, Venus de Milo

Cupid and Psyche
Roman marble copy of a late Hellenistic work
Capitoline Museum

The antique marble figures of Cupid and Psyche entered the Capitoline Museum in 1750, shortly after they were excavated and restored. Two other versions of the group already were known in Rome, but Haskell and Penny report that the Capitoline version quickly became the favorite. "It was the sentiment that most appealed to both travelers and scholars  'the first burst of youthful loveliness' ; the 'innocent fondness' ; the 'virginal' and ingenuous gesture of the Psyche. But there were also many learned discussions of the philosophical allegory of the soul which the group might embody, and the execution was not always admired  Saint-Victor thought it was but a poor reflection of some earlier and superior work ..."

Marchino di Campertogno
Cupid and Psyche
ca. 1820-25
copy - ivory miniature statuette
Victoria & Albert Museum

Sèvres Manufactory
Cupid and Psyche
ca. 1770
porcelain
Victoria & Albert Museum

Auguste Desnoyers after Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
Cupid and Psyche
1803
engraving
British Museum

Anonymous photographer
Cupid and Psyche
ca. 1880-1904
photograph of a cast
Rijksmuseum

The vast marble carving known as the Farnese Bull (below) was discovered in the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla in 1545. By 1546 it was owned by the Farnese. "By 1550 or not long after, it had (on the advice of Michelangelo) been partially restored and placed in the second courtyard of the palace." After several moves, the Farnese Bull came to a stable home in the 19th century at the national museum in Naples. Another name sometimes used for this group was The Fable of Dirce.

Farnese Bull
Roman marble copy after an earlier Hellenistic group
National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Underwood and Underwood, Publishers
Farnese Bull
ca. 1900
stereograph
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

François Perrier
Farnese Bull
1638
etching
Rijksmuseum

Domenico de Rossi
Farnese Bull
ca. 1704
engraving
Philadelphia Museum of Art


Antoni Zürcher
Farnese Bull
late 18th-early 19th century
engraving
Rijksmuseum

Peter Paul Rubens
Farnese Bull
early 17th century
drawing
British Museum

"At first the group was praised enthusiastically by even the most sophisticated connoisseurs: thus Federico Zuccaro described this 'marvelous mountain of marble' as being, with the Laocoön, 'the most remarkable and marvelous work of the chisel of the ancients, showing what the art of sculpture can achieve at its most excellent'. This opinion continued to be held by many travelers and guides, but doubts about its quality were expressed with increasing frequency as the century advanced, though there was never any dispute that it was one of the most famous pieces of sculpture in the world  not least because it was one of the largest. ... Winckelmann did, however, emphasize how very extensive had been the restoration, ignorance of which, he suggested, had been responsible for so many absurd ideas about the work. There had long been anxieties on this score  anxieties which had clearly prompted Maffei's claim (also jeered at by Winckelmann) that only repairs of existing fragments had proved necessary and that nothing new had been added; the controversy continued about the degree of restoration, the authenticity and the quality of the Bull.  With only a few exceptions  as late as 1802 a traveler called it 'the very finest group of ancient art, and superior even to the Laocoön'  opinion hardened against it, despite the most vigorous efforts of Neapolitan museum officials to sustain its declining reputation, and this decline continued throughout the nineteenth century."


Prévost Zachée
Venus de Milo
1822
engraving
Philadelphia Museum of Art

The Venus de Milo was discovered quite late, in 1820. Even that late, it would certainly have been restored if officials at the Louvre had been able to agree about what position the arms should take. "The statue remains one of the most famous in the world, 'on sale in white plastic in the gift shops of Athens and everywhere else', but the author of a recent study of Aphrodite suspects that most of his readers are 'unmoved' by the 'rather chilly giantess in the Louvre'. Moreover, its reputation, 'which, started by propaganda, has become perpetuated by habit', perplexes the scholars who since the late nineteenth century have tended to place it in the second century BC and believe it to represent a revival of pre-Hellenistic ideals." 

Anonymous sculptor
Venus de Milo
1847
copy - bronze statuette
Royal Collection, Great Britain

Medows Firm
Venus de Milo
ca. 1850-73
copy - bronze statuette
Royal Collection, Great Britain

Jan de Bisschop
Statue group of the Empress Faustina with Gladiator as Paramour
17th century
wash drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum

In Taste and the Antique Frances Haskell and Nicolas Penny bring forward the example of an antique sculpture group famous during the Renaissance and now fallen into total obscurity. As illustrated immediately above by Jan de Bisschop, this pair of statues was thought to depict a scandalous episode from Imperial history when the Empress Faustina conceived an irresistible passion for a gladiator. Haskell and Panny would wish to go back and ask the Renaissance connoisseurs how they can possibly have believed the statues really represented this empress in the act of fondling her gladiator? The Roman historical record reports that powerful people shortly arranged for the gladiator to be murdered and removed from the scene in an effort to contain the scandal. Would this have been the the moment when a statue was needed? Who would have commissioned such an object, and where would it have stood? "Topical narrative of this type was never found in contemporary sculpture, and it is therefore very surprising that it should have been supposed common in antiquity."