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PIETRO BAZZANTI, AFTER THE ANTIQUE | BUST OF THE VENUS DE' MEDICI

Lot Closed

June 18, 03:38 PM GMT

Estimate

6,000 - 8,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

PIETRO BAZZANTI, AFTER THE ANTIQUE

Italian

1825 - 1895

BUST OF THE VENUS DE' MEDICI


signed: P. Bazzanti / Florence

white marble

52cm., 20½in.


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The recent discovery of Willem van Tetrode’s bronze reduction of the Venus de’Medici revealed that this most iconic of antique marble Venuses was known as early as the mid-16th century. By 1638, the Venus was certainly located in the Villa Medici in Rome, from which she acquired her name. In 1677 she was sent to Florence and installed in the Tribuna of the Uffizi, where she remains to this day, having been briefly replaced by Antonio Canova’s Venus Italica during her sojourn in France between 1803 and 1815. Thought to be a Graeco-Roman adaptation of the fabled Aphrodite of Knidos by Praxiteles, the Venus de’Medici counts among the most glorified and controversial statues from antiquity. Every inch of the marble has been scrutinised in her long reception history, from Lord Byron’s gushing “description of the indescribable” to the Duke of Shrewsbury’s criticism of her arms. It is perhaps partly because of her illustrious position and provenance that the Venus de’Medici is the most famous of several ancient marbles depicting the goddess in the alluring pudica pose, notably the Capitoline Venus. The statue’s notorious beauty inspired countless copies throughout the centuries, including plaster casts, full-size marbles, reductions in bronze, and bust versions such as the present marble.


RELATED LITERATURE

F. Haskell and N. Penny, Taste and the Antique. The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900, New Haven/London, 1982, pp. 325-328