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本帖最后由 ngsunyu 于 2019-6-29 00:23 编辑
12枚 之一是 法国文艺复兴时期雕塑家 Ponce Jacquiot(1527年生于Rethel, 1571年在巴黎去世)的维纳斯的脚上有一根刺 的赤土陶像 (巴黎卢浮宫博物馆藏品) 与 青铜像 (伦敦维多利亚和阿尔伯特博物馆藏品)。
Ponce Jacquiot (né à Rethel, connu à partir de 1527 - mort à Paris en 1571) est un sculpteur, stucateur et peintre français de la Renaissance. La sequel œuvre attribuée avec certitude à Ponce Jacquiot est une petite figure représentant La tireuse d'épines, donc la version en terre-cuite (Paris, musée du Louvre, ancienne collection du sculpteur François Girardon au xviie siècle, puis collection de Pierre Crozat) prépare sans doute celle en bronze (conservée à Londres, Victoria and Albert Museum).
According to legend, the rose was originally a white flower, but in Venus' haste to help the dying Adonis, a thorn pierced her foot and her blood stained the petals red. This bronze shows the kneeling figure of the naked Venus removing the thorn from her foot. The pose is similar to that of the same subject engraved by Marco Dente (died 1527) after a fresco executed by Raphael's workshop in 1516 for the bathroom of Cardinal Bibbiena in Rome. The terracotta model for this figure, which was formerly painted to imitate bronze, is now in the Musée du Louvre in Paris. The Dente engraving was once in the collection of the artist François Girardon; it is mentioned in the inventory made after his death in 1710 and appears in an engraving of the Galerie de Girardon of the same date.
Ponce Jacqueau, who also worked in Rome, was one of the leading Parisian sculptors of his day. The figure of Venus is closely related in style and handling to the bronze figures of Prudence and Temperance that he made for the funerary monument of Henry II of France in the abbey church of Saint-Denis in Paris, in about 1565-1570. It is a unique cast, although smaller versions exist in other collections. A Mother and Child in the Wallace Collection in London is also attributed to the artist. (collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O70342/venus-removing-a-thorn-from-statuette-ponce-jacquiot/) |
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