Friday, February 3, 2017

Russian Copies of Various Classical Masterpieces

Carlo Albacini
copy of the Head of the Apollo Belvedere
ca. 1750-1800
marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Benedetto Pistrucci
copy of the Head of the Apollo Belvedere
early 19th century
sardonyx cameo
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous French sculptor
copy of the Apollo Belvedere at the Vatican
18th century
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

The canon of sculptural masterpieces surviving from antiquity took shape in Rome during the 16th century. By the 18th century a core group of about eighty distinct statues had come to represent the unquestioned dogma of ideal beauty for all of educated Europe. Thousands of copies proliferated in every conceivable medium. Those seen here are the copies that ended up in the Russian imperial collections. All are now owned by the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, but many are no longer on display. The prestige of the originals began to fade in the middle of the 19th century, and has continued to fade. Naturally enough, the prestige of the copies has faded further.

Stefano Maderno
copy of the Laocoön at the Vatican
1630
terracotta statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Paolo Andrea Triscornia
copy of the Laocoön at  the Vatican
1798
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Paolo Andrea Triscornia
copy of Sleeping Ariadne (or Cleopatra) at the Vatican
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Francesco Righetti
copy of Meleager at the Vatican
1788
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor in Rome
copy of Equestrian Marcus Aurelius in the Capitoline Museum, Rome
ca. 1750-1800
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor
copy of the Spinario in the Capitoline Museum, Rome
1560s
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Paolo Andrea Triscornia
copy of the Dying Gladiator in the Capitoline Museum, Rome
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor
copy of Capitoline Antinous at the Capitoline Museum, Rome
ca. 1750-1775
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor in Florence
copy of Gaul Killing Himself and His Wife
(also known as Paetus and Arria)
at Museo delle Terme, Rome
ca. 1700-1725
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Paolo Andrea Triscornia
copy of the Apollino in the Tribuna of the Uffizi, Florence
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor
copy of the Apollino in the Tribuna of the Uffizi, Florence
ca. 1700-1750
full-size bronze
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Paolo Andrea Triscornia
copy of Germanicus at the Louvre
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Carlo Albacini
copy of Castor and Pollux at the Prado
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Anonymous Italian sculptor
copy of the Farnese Hercules in Naples
ca. 1775-1800
full-size marble
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Antonio Susini
copy of the Farnese Bull in Naples
1613
bronze statuette
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny researched and described in detail the rising and sinking fortunes of the originals of each of these statues in their indispensable study, Taste and the Antique (Yale, 1981).