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LOT 500

A CARVED MARBLE FIGURE OF EROS SLEEPING lying...

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A CARVED MARBLE FIGURE OF EROS SLEEPING lying on the infant Hercules's lion's pelt spread over a rock, resting his head on his left arm, his right lying across his body and with his legs crossed, his hair with a central plait, the underside slightly hollowed 19.6cm high, 60.5cm wide, 29.5cm deep PROVENANCE An English private collection, acquired by the vendor's parents, probably from a Country House sale in the 1940/50s. This unpublished and hitherto anonymous statue of Cupid sleeping belongs to a class of sculptures that was favoured in ancient Roman sculpture, was revived in Renaissance Italy and was later popularised in Baroque Rome by Algardi and particularly François Duquesnoy, with many variations on exact pose and subject. Therefore, the present statue could potentially have originated from any of these epochs and there are only its appearance (veiled by weathering from exposure out of doors - for perhaps a couple of centuries at least) and circumstantial evidence to narrow the choice. It depicts the winged child god of love sleeping on a lion's skin which is an attribute of Hercules. There is one tale that tells of Cupid stealing his club, quiver and lion's skin, suggesting that even the most powerful are vulnerable to the subtle cunning ways of love. The image of sleeping Cupid was used by the Romans in a variety of ways: as a fountain or garden ornament, a dedication to the gods or, as possibly in this case, as a funerary monument where the statue was used as a child's tomb cover.

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Time, Location
01 Apr 2020
UK, Wiltshire
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[ translate ]

A CARVED MARBLE FIGURE OF EROS SLEEPING lying on the infant Hercules's lion's pelt spread over a rock, resting his head on his left arm, his right lying across his body and with his legs crossed, his hair with a central plait, the underside slightly hollowed 19.6cm high, 60.5cm wide, 29.5cm deep PROVENANCE An English private collection, acquired by the vendor's parents, probably from a Country House sale in the 1940/50s. This unpublished and hitherto anonymous statue of Cupid sleeping belongs to a class of sculptures that was favoured in ancient Roman sculpture, was revived in Renaissance Italy and was later popularised in Baroque Rome by Algardi and particularly François Duquesnoy, with many variations on exact pose and subject. Therefore, the present statue could potentially have originated from any of these epochs and there are only its appearance (veiled by weathering from exposure out of doors - for perhaps a couple of centuries at least) and circumstantial evidence to narrow the choice. It depicts the winged child god of love sleeping on a lion's skin which is an attribute of Hercules. There is one tale that tells of Cupid stealing his club, quiver and lion's skin, suggesting that even the most powerful are vulnerable to the subtle cunning ways of love. The image of sleeping Cupid was used by the Romans in a variety of ways: as a fountain or garden ornament, a dedication to the gods or, as possibly in this case, as a funerary monument where the statue was used as a child's tomb cover.

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Time, Location
01 Apr 2020
UK, Wiltshire
Auction House
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