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1035_06_710310 Gods Inspire Poet, Poussin, Nicolas
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alb2069412 Nicolas Poussin / 'Parnassus', 1630-1631, French School, Oil on canvas, 145 cm x 197 cm, P02313. Museum: MUSEO DEL PRADO, MADRID, SPAIN.
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akg5924358 Room of the Signatureby Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio) (1483-1520)Raphael's Rooms The Room of the Segnatura contains Raphael's most famous frescoes. The room takes its name from the highest court of the Holy See, the 'Segnatura Gratiae et Iustitiae', which was presided over by the pontiff and used to meet in this room around the middle of the 16th century. Originally the room was used by Julius II (pontiff from 1503 to 1513) as a library and private office. The iconographic programme of the frescoes, which were painted between 1508 and 1511, is related to this function. It was certainly established by a theologian and meant to represent the three greatest categories of the human spirit: Truth, Good and Beauty. RIGHT: School of AthensThe most famous philosophers of ancient times move within an imposing Renaissance architecture which is inspired by Bramante's project for the renewal of the early Christian basilica of St Peter.LEFT: ParnassusBeneath Poetry, Mount Parnassus is represented: the god Apollo, seated at the centre, plays the lyre surrounded by the nine Muses, protectresses of the arts, and by ancient and modern poets, among whom Homer (blind), Virgil and Dante are easily recognisable behind him, as well as the poetess Sapphos seated at the bottom left, with her name written on the scroll she holds in her left hand.Vatican Museums (Raphael's Rooms - Room of the Signature, Stanza della Segnatura).
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alb3643607 Apollo sitting on Parnassus surrounded by the muses and famous poets. Artist: Marcantonio Raimondi (Italian, Argini (?) ca. 1480-before 1534 Bologna (?)); After Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi) (Italian, Urbino 1483-1520 Rome). Dimensions: Sheet: 14 in. × 18 1/2 in. (35.6 × 47 cm). Date: ca. 1517-20. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3649370 Job rebuked by his Friends, from Illustrations of the Book of Job. Artist: William Blake (British, London 1757-1827 London). Dimensions: plate: 8 1/2 x 6 5/8 in. (21.6 x 16.8 cm)sheet: 16 3/16 x 10 7/8 in. (41.1 x 27.6 cm). Publisher: Published by William Blake (British, London 1757-1827 London) No. 3 Fountain Court, Strand. Date: 1825-26. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb9502892 Apollo sits, surrounded by muses, on Mount Parnassus. In his left hand he holds a scepter, with his right hand he points heavenward. To his right, Pegasus has appeared in the sky. Lower on the mountain, a poet is writing, looking to Apollo for inspiration., Apollo on Mount Parnassus, print maker: Gerard de Lairesse, (rejected attribution), 1669, paper, etching, h 120 mm × w 64 mm.
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akg8385113 Herms with heads of gods, fauns, the triple Hecat ... - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385110 Statue of goddess Ceres (Greek : Demeter, goddess of agriculture, grain crops, fertility and motherly relationships.). - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385111 The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385108 Statue of Neptun (Neptune). The old bearded man holds a small dolphin in his right hand. He symbolises the river Tiber flowing down in the valley. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385100 Statue of Neptun (Neptune). The old bearded man holds a small dolphin in his right hand. He symbolises the river Tiber flowing down in the valley. On the left a large dolphin opens his mouth. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385106 Herms with heads of gods, fauns, the triple Hecat ... - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385074 Sculpture of Proteus - Glauco (Protée-Glaucos, Proteus-Glaukos). The colossal head is Proteus, prophetic sea-god. The figure who bears on his head the globe surmounted by a castle, is still Gauco, the fisherman who became a sea god after having eaten a magical herb. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385083 Statue of Neptun (Neptune). The old bearded man holds a small dolphin in his right hand. He symbolises the river Tiber flowing down in the valley. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385094 Herms with heads of gods, fauns, the triple Hecat ... - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385075 Statue of goddess Ceres (Greek : Demeter, goddess of agriculture, grain crops, fertility and motherly relationships.). - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385091 Sculpture of Proteus - Glauco (Protée-Glaucos, Proteus-Glaukos). The colossal head is Proteus, prophetic sea-god. The figure who bears on his head the globe surmounted by a castle, is still Gauco, the fisherman who became a sea god after having eaten a magical herb. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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akg8385085 Statue of a Furie (greek : Érinye) Mythology: The Furies were female chthonic deities of vengeance. - The Sacro Bosco (Sacred Wood, Bois Sacré, Heiliger Wald) also called Park of the Monsters (Parc des Monstres, Park der Ungeheuer, Parco dei Mostri ), also named Garden of Bomarzo (Jardins de Bomarzo) is a Mannerist monumental complex located in Bomarzo, in northern Lazio, Italy. The garden was created in 1552 by Prince Pier Francesco 'Vicino' Orsini and the great architect Pirro Ligorio under the name of 'Villa of the Wonders (Villa des Merveilles, Park der Wunder). Situated in a wooded valley bottom beneath the castle of Orsini, it is populated by grotesque larger-than-life sculptures, some sculpted in the bedrock, and small buildings located among the natural vegetation. The park of Bomarzo was intended not to please, but to astonish. It has inspired many famous painters, writers and poets. Abandonned for centuries it became at the end of the 20th century, after a restoration program, a major tourist attraction. 2020.
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alb3194030 Playwright Paul Scarron surrounded by allegorical figures, Jacob Folkema, 1703 - 1767.
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akg8320352 INSPIRATION personification in a young sinner: "It will be seen from the clear sky all starry flaming ray, which descends, and which has come, and dense in the chest of a young girl dressed in yellow color, who has shaggy hair, and mixed with many Serpi (...) He will hold with his right hand a naked sword with the pointed tip on the ground, and with his left an Elithropium. (...) the flaming ray (...), means (...) the kindness of the Almighty God, who through his infinite goodness inspires and inflames the sinner ". Allegorical colored engraving from "'Of the very new Iconology of Cesare Ripa (around 1555 - 1622), Perugia (...), Work useful for Oratories, Preachers, Poets, Painters, Sculptors, Designers, & to every scholar to invent Concepts, Emblems , and Companies (...) "enriched and corrected by Mr. Giovanni Zaratino Castellini (1570-1641), Roman. Pietro Paolo Tozzi, Padua 1625 - 1626.
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akg8320427 DIVINE COMEDY Paradiso, canto XXXIII. "In the deep and clear subsistence / Of the high light seemed to me three revolutions / Of three colors and a continence." (III, XXXIII, 115-117). In an allegorical frame of the work: on the left the Supreme Poet Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) at the desk, on the right the mystery of the Holy Trinity. Chromolithography from a series by Egisto Sborgi Editore, Florence 1918.
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akg8320424 DIVINE COMEDY Paradiso, canto XXVII. "To the Father, to the Son, to the Holy Spirit / All Heaven began to glory; / That sweet song intoxicated me." (III, XXVII, 1-3). In an allegorical frame of the work: on the left the Supreme Poet Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) at the desk, on the right the choir of Angels and Blessed Souls intones a hymn of praise to God. Chromolithography from a series by Egisto Sborgi Editore, Florence 1918.
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alb4473517 Mythological and allegorical representations inspired by the playwright Paul Scarron, One mythological and two allegorical representations, produced for a book edition of the plays by Paul Scarron. Left: The writing Scarron is surrounded by Melpomene (with mask) and an acclaimed angel who both blow the trumpet, in the background a boy with a shell and Apollo with his winch are watching. Middle: The battle of the gods and giants. Right: Minerva leads Scarron to a place where Apollo makes music with his nine muses., Theater, theatrical performance, author, poet writing (inspiration), Melpomene (one of the Muses), 'Melpomene' (Ripa), battle of the Giants against the gods: gigantomachy, Apollo and the Muses, Apollo Musagetes, Paul Scarron, Jacob Folkema (mentioned on object), 1703 - 1767, paper, etching, h 127 mm × w 214 mm.
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alb4466306 Portrait of Alexander Pope, Portrait of the English poet Alexander Pope. On the base below the portrait an image of Apollo Musagetes, Apollo among the nine muses on Mount Parnassus, as a representation of poetic inspiration and art. Above this image a sun that shines through a cloud cover. On the base are tambourine, flute, crown, mask and caduceus. At the top of the portrait two wings, a torch and a winch., Alexander Pope, Jacob Houbraken (mentioned on object), Amsterdam, 1747, paper, pen, h 350 mm × w 217 mm.
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alb3192355 Mythological and allegorical scenes about the inspiration of the playwright Paul Scarron, Jacob Folkema, Louis Fabritius Dubourg, 1703 - 1767.
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alb3650516 Landscape with Apollo and the Muses. Artist: Claude Lorrain (Claude Gellée) (French, Chamagne 1604/5?-1682 Rome). Dimensions: 9 3/8 x 12 5/8 in. (23.8 x 32.1 cm). Date: 1674.This work belongs to a group of five drawings dated 1674 that bear witness to Claude's ongoing interest in the theme of Apollo and the Muses on Mount Parnassus. This subject was very popular in 17th-century Rome: it was featured in one of the celebrated murals that Raphael had painted in the Vatican, and it served to glorify the patron concerned as a protector of the arts. One of Claude's most ambitious paintings had been Landscape with Parnassus (National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh), commissioned in 1652 by cardinal Camillo Astalli-Pamphilj, the nephew of the then-reigning pope, Innocent X. Twenty-two years later the artist made a series of works exploring the subject anew, including the Metropolitan Museum's drawing. This is the largest of the set; it also stands out for the use of tinted paper and the presence of a massive slanted tree. Unlike the other drawings of the series, the emphasis here is not on a play between a mountain in the foreground on one side and a distant plain on the other, but between the figures huddled on the left and the tree leaning towards the right, which are all set in the same plane, a different way of attaining equilibrium through the counterbalancing of opposites. The result is a frieze-like arrangement, where the eye is offered an outlet into depth only along the right margin. This is where a group of poets heading for Mount Parnassus can barely be made out. The winged horse on the slope of the mountain just above Apollo and the Muses is Pegasus, who has struck the ground and is making the Hippocrene fountain spring, a source of poetic inspiration. Its water reappears at the feet of Apollo and cascades towards the foreground pool, where two swans, birds sacred to Apollo, are floating. A few of the Muses can be identified by virtue of their attributes: the one elegantly striding on the extreme left is Terpsichore, the Muse of dance; the one seated in front of her and holding a trumpet is Clio, the Muse of historical writing (the trumpet refers to the glory that history bestows on its protagonists); the one seated on the right with a book is Calliope, the Muse of epic poetry; the one standing next to her with a theatrical mask is Talia, the Muse of comedy. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb1973391 The inspiration of the poet, ca 1630, by Nicolas Poussin (1594-1655), oil on canvas, 184x214 cm. Location: Paris, Musée Du Louvre.
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alb3658939 The Reign of Jupiter. Culture: Northern French. Dimensions: Overall (confirmed): H. 14 7/8 x W. 19 x D. 1 1/2 in. (37.8 x 48.3 x 3.8 cm). Date: ca. 1550-70.This sophisticated relief, adroitly carved and freighted with meaning, reflects the French Renaissance in all its charm and mystery. Six discrete scenes fill the rectangular marble slab, three above and three below. Jupiter occupies the prime position at top center. Accompanied by his eagle, he sits on a rocky ledge, holding -- unusually for this Roman god -- a scepter and a book. From his blocky throne emerge three streams, which seemingly but not physically flow down into a disklike image of a fountain in a forest. Elaborately decorated, this watery scene features dolphins supporting a basin, from which rises an obelisk. The setting is ideal, rather than untamed nature or a garden. One spots a palm tree as well as deciduous trees. To Jupiter's right, the figure of the god Mercury with a carefully delineated caduceus flies toward the chief Olympian, seeming to engage him in speech. Below Mercury, a pair of naked children embrace. The upper right section of the relief represents an ideal city with a circular temple in front of finished and ruined buildings. Below, a bow-wielding male centaur rears toward the center.The graphic quality of this relief raises the possibility that the sculptor followed a drawn model or models. In the French Renaissance, painters such as Francesco Primaticcio and architects such as Jean Bullant routinely furnished drawings to sculptors for tombs or building facades. The lack of fluid connection between the parts of this relief makes one wonder if the sculptor assembled drawings and prints from different sources, possibly following the verbal program of a poet or writer. The circular depiction of a fountain in the forest, for instance, could be an excerpt from an illustrated book. It is reminiscent of woodcut illustrations in the Venetian Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, published in France in 1546.[1] The ideal city recalls paintings and drawings by Jean Cousin.[2] The prevalence of such themes in graphic and painted work of the 1540s and 1550s supports a dating about that time. The elegance and fluid carving of the low-relief figures have led scholars to suggest that they are by one of the foremost sculptors of the period, perhaps Jean Goujon or Germain Pilon. Yet neither of those artists seems to have been responsible. Instead, it resembles most closely the work of the unidentified carver or atelier employed about 1549 - 52 at the chapel of the Château d'Anet, south of Paris. The elongation of the figures, the courtly gestures of the embracing putti, the swirling patterns of drapery in the air around them, and the emphasis on decorative pattern are all traits shared by the Anet chapel reliefs and this small marble. The air of courtly refinement and delight in decorative pattern bring to mind the famous Diana of Anet (ca. 1549, Musée du Louvre, Paris), a monumental fountain figure supported by a brilliantly patterned sarcophagus-shaped pedestal.The unusual combination of figures and emblems on the relief has invited varied interpretations, of which Michael Mezzatesta's is the most comprehensive and carefully considered.[3] The embracing infants and the centaur are seen by Mezzatesta and others as the zodiacal signs of Gemini and Sagittarius. They may refer to the birth date of a specific person, though Mezzatesta reads them as a conjunction of constellations arranged by Jupiter to coincide with poetic inspiration, as signified by the fountain between them. Mercury is the messenger god of eloquence and the arts. Mezzatesta equated him here with Charles, cardinal of Lorraine, a statesman famous for his eloquence, and the figure of Jupiter with King Henry II. In his view, the whole relief is connected with the cardinal's now-destroyed Grotte de Meudon outside of Paris, a site of poetic and artistic inspiration about which Pierre de Ronsard and others wrote. In another analysis of the Museum's marble tablet, Colin Eisler relates it to emblematic reliefs seen on contemporary heart monuments (sculptures accompanying the burial of a human heart), such as the one dedicated to Francis I at the cathedral of Saint-Denis, that emphasize the role of the arts in our creative nature.[4] In Eisler's view, the dimensions, quality, and iconography of the present relief all indicate that it was designed for use on a French royal heart monument. Although there is no documentary evidence to support the idea, he wonders whether it was commissioned for Charles IX (who died 1571 and for whom no such memorial is known) and suggests the possibility that Jacquiot Ponce carved it. While these are tempting suggestions, there is little evidence to support this work's connection with a heart monument. Ponce's stuccowork -- which is all that remains to testify to his relief style -- shows little affinity with this marble relief. The rabbeting of three edges -- the bottom edge has been recut -- indicate that the relief was intended to be framed and thus was probably meant to be set into a monument or into the fabric of a wall. What can be said for sure of this exquisitely carved marble is that it must have been intended for a particular location, and surely for a noble if not a royal complex; that it followed a specific program, most likely suggested by a poet or writer; and that its motifs and style suggest a date of about 1550 - 70.[Ian Wardropper. European Sculpture, 1400-1900, In the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 2011, no. 21, pp. 71-73.]Footnotes:[1] See Henri Zerner. L'Art de la Renaissance en France: L'Invention du classicism. Paris, 1996, fig. 320.[2] See, for example, Cousin's Children Playing among Ruins (1540 - 70, Musée du Louvre, Paris); ibid., fig. 272.[3] Michael P. Mezzatesta. "The King, the Poet, and the Nation: A French Sixteenth-Century Relief and the Pléiade." In IL 60: Essays Honoring Irvin Lavin on His Sixtieth Birthday, edited by Marilyn Aronberg Lavin, pp. 227-52. New York, 1990.[4] Colin Eisler. "Fit for a Royal Heart?: A French Renaissance Relief at the Metropolitan Museum of Art." Metropolitan Museum Journal 38 (2003), pp. 145-56. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3626233 Clytie. Artist: William Henry Rinehart (American, Union Bridge, Maryland 1825-1874 Rome). Dimensions: 62 1/2 x 18 1/2 x 21 1/4 in. (158.8 x 47 x 54 cm). Date: 1869-70; carved 1872.American Neoclassical sculptors frequently mined classical mythology for thematic inspiration. In book 4 of the "Metamorphoses," the Roman poet Ovid tells the story of Clytie, a water nymph who was abandoned by Apollo, the sun god. Clytie gazed inconsolably at the sun for nine days, languishing nude, without food or drink. For her constancy, she was changed into a sunflower so that her face would forever follow the sun as it moved across the sky. Rinehart subtly evoked Ovid's story by depicting a drooping sunflower in Clytie's right hand. The tree stump with live sunflower plants serves both to enhance the narrative and to offer tensile support for the marble figure. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
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alb3511626 Apollo sitting on Parnassus surrounded by the muses and famous poets, ca. 1517–20, Engraving, Sheet: 14 x 18 7/16 in. (35.6 x 46.9 cm), Prints, Marcantonio Raimondi (Italian, Argini (?) ca. 1480–before 1534 Bologna (?)), Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio or Santi) (Italian, Urbino 1483–1520 Rome), Raphael's 'Parnassus' in the Vatican is the paradigmatic representation of the subject where Apollo on Parnassus is surrounded by the muses and famous poets, from which all later versions drew inspiration.
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