Object Description
A Grand Tour equestrian bronze of Marcus Aurelius, after Hopfgarten, after the antique, shown astride a prancing horse with no reins and a Sarmatian saddlecloth with no stirrups, his right hand outstretched, raised on a shaped mahogany plinth inset with bas relief panels showing classical maidens. Italian, circa 1860.
Footnote: This bronze is a particularly fine reduction of the Roman original which is displayed in the Palazzo dei Conservatori of the Musei Capitolini in Rome. The original sculpture, one of a very small number of surviving images of the emperor, was erected in 175 AD. The German-born Wilhelm Hopfgarten (1779-1860) started a bronze foundry and sculpture studio in Rome in 1805 with his compatriot Benjamin Ludwig Jollage. Their bronzes were highly sought after by Grand Tourists and they cast for famed artists, including Antonio Canova and Bertel Thorvaldsen.