A Gilt-Bronze Bust of Venus, After the Antique

GBP 1,400.00

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Object Description

French, early 19th century, After the Antique
Bust of Venus
Gilt bronze, mounted on ebonised wood mount and green serpentine base
23.5 cm. / 9 ΒΌ ins overall

This gilt bronze bust is based on the head of the ancient Crouching Venus in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence (inv. 1914 n.188), which was first recorded in 1670 in the inventory of the Villa Medici, Rome. In the late eighteenth century it was moved to Florence and displayed in the Uffizi. The Uffizi Venus is believed to be a Roman copy of a lost Greek statue of Aphrodite, attributed by Pliny the Elder to the sculptor Daedalsas. It was widely copied in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, most notably by Antoine Coysevox, who was commisioned by Louis XIV to carve a copy for the gardens at Versailles, which is now in the Louvre (1684-86, inv. MR1826).

Judging by the material and facture of the present bust, it was likely cast in France in the early nineteenth century.

Object Literature

RELATED LITERATURE:
F. Haskell and N. Penny, ‘Taste and the Antique’ (New Haven, Yale, 1982), pp. 321-23, fig. 171

Object Details

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By appointment only.

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London W1 (Mayfair), by appointment.

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