Friday, June 10, 2016

Roman Antiquities as 18th-century Commodities

William Chambers
Charles Townley's residence at 7 Park Street, London
1794
watercolor
British Museum

William Chambers
Charles Townley's residence at 7 Park Street, London
1794
watercolor
British Museum
 
Charles Townley (1737-1805) was only one of many rich Londoners who filled his house with ancient statues toward the end of the 18th century. England's economic and political power vastly outweighed any comparable power in depressed and disunited Italy. With the British Empire booming, its rulers and perpetrators became actively keen to identify themselves with Imperial Romans. "Antique marbles" became wildly fashionable and widely available, helped along by the entrepreneurial excavations of English speculators in and around Rome. These dodgy characters spent half their time in hasty digging and the other half bribing local officials in order to keep and export the finds. Today there is a large collection of ephemera at the British Museum from the correspondence between dealers in Rome and buyers in London, including many idealized drawings and prints of the often very questionable objects for sale.  

William Skelton
Charles Townley's Calling Card with Antique Busts
ca. 1778-1848
etching
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Townley Venus
ca. 1775-1805
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Townley Venus
ca. 1775-1805
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Townley Venus
ca. 1775-1805
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Bust of Hadrian
ca. 1768-1805
drawing
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Head from an antique statue of Nero
ca. 1768-1805
drawing
British Museum

Vincenzo Dolcibene
Discobolus
1792
drawing
British Museum
     
Vincenzo Dolcibene
Discobolus arm
ca. 1768-1805
drawing
British Museum

attributed to Gavin Hamilton
Antique statue of sleeping-nymph
ca. 1774-77
drawing
British Museum

after Pier Leone Ghezzi
Statuette of Venus
ca.1720
etching
British Museum

John Brown
Head from an antique statue of a Gaul
ca. 1786
drawing
British Museum

John Brown
Antique sculpture of an eagle
ca. 1786
drawing
British Museum

In 2010 a two-volume study of this squalid trade-arrangement was published by Yale University Press  Digging and Dealing in Eighteenth-Century Rome by Ilaria Bignamini and Clare Hornsby.