Friday, May 20, 2016

Laocoön, Centaurs

Jan de Bisschop
The Laocoön
ca. 1663-68
etching
Rijksmuseum

In the age of Napoleon, the late Hellenistic marble statue group of the Laocoön retained all the glamour it had already enjoyed in Rome for three centuries. "Visitors still hurried, as they had been doing for so long, to enthuse over the Apollo, the Antinous and the Laocoön and in so doing scarcely paused to comment on the vast wealth of freshly acquired statuary. And the impulse felt by so many of them to express in print their very conventional feelings about masterpieces that had already been described countless times before clearly enhanced the prestige of old favorites rather than drew attention to new discoveries. Familiarity bred not contempt but an irresistible urge to rhapsodize, and never were the disclaimers (which had become conventional as early as the beginning of the seventeenth century) about the need for yet another account of the most famous antique statues so frequently repeated and so little heeded as they were by the end of the eighteenth century." 


Nicolas Beatrizet
The Laocoön in a niche
ca. 1540-66
engraving
British Museum

Joseph Nollekens
The Laocoön
ca. 1803-1805
terracotta
Victoria & Albert Museum

Underwood and Underwood, Publishers
The Laocoön
ca. 1900
stereograph
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

William Hilton
Central Figure from the Laocoön Group
ca. 1801-1839
drawing
British Museum

attributed to Francesco Righetti
The Laocoön
before 1781
full-size copy in marble
Rijksmuseum

When the marble Centaur with Cupid (below) was discovered in 17th century Rome, "the head was especially admired and it was likened in character to that of The Laocoön." The statue was on display at the Villa Borghese by the 1630s, and remained there until it was purchased in 1807, along with many other Borghese marbles, by Napoleon, who had it sent to Paris. It has sometimes been called by other names, such as Centaur tamed by Bacchus ; Borghese Centaur ; Centaur in love ; Centaur Nessus led by Love. 

Centaur with Cupid
Roman marble copy of a Hellenistic bronze
formerly in the Villa Borghese
since 1811 in the Louvre

Domenico de Rossi
Centaur with Cupid
ca. 1704
engraving
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Domenico de Rossi
Centaur with Cupid
ca. 1704
engraving
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Anonymous sculptor
Centaur with Cupid
late 18th century
copy - bronze statuette
Royal Collection, Great Britain

The two Furietti Centaurs were discovered in the 1730s during an excavation at Hadrian's Villa led by Monsignor Furietti. They were copied and imitated dozens of times before the end of the 18th century. A succession of Popes engaged in struggles with Monsignor Furietti to obtain the statues for the state. The Popes could not prevail with the Monsignor, but they prevailed with his heirs. The Centaurs have been on display at the Capitoline Museum since the 1760s.

Younger Furietti Centaur
Roman copy in bigio morato of a Hellenistic bronze
discovered on the site of Hadrian's Villa
Capitoline Museum, Rome

Anonymous sculptor
Younger Furietti Centaur
18th century
copy - marble statuette in rosso antico
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Anonymous sculptor
Younger Furietti Centaur
18th century
copy in bronze
Château de Malmaison

Anonymous sculptor
Elder Furietti Centaur
18th century
copy in bronze
Château de Malmaison

Elder Furietti Centaur (detail)
Roman copy in bigio morato of a Hellenistic bronze
discovered on the site of Hadrian's Villa
Capitoline Museum, Rome

Girolamo Frezza after Nicola Onofri
Elder Furietti Centaur
1738
engraving
British Museum

Anonymous artist
Hall of the Royal Academy, Somerset House
Plaster casts of Furietti Centaurs between columns, flanking cast of the Farnese Hercules
1810
hand-colored etching
Victoria & Albert Museum

Quoted passages are from Taste and the Antique by Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny (Yale University Press, 1981).