Probablement Italie, début XIXeme, d'après l'antique - Lot 16

Lot 16
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Estimation :
4000 - 5000 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 7 150EUR
Probablement Italie, début XIXeme, d'après l'antique - Lot 16
Probablement Italie, début XIXeme, d'après l'antique Hercules Farnese Brown patina bronze sculpture representing one of the twelve labors of Hercules. He is leaning against the skin of the Nemean lion, which is resting against his club on a rock. This sculpture is based on a model by Glycon of Athens dating from the 3rd century and housed in the National Archaeological Museum in Naples. Height: 33 cm Reference : F. Haskell, N. Penny, Pour l'Amour de l'Antique. Greco-Roman statuary and European taste 1500-1800, London 1988, p. 249, no. 116. The gigantic marble Antique Hercules was first mentioned in 1556 in the Farnese Palace; the head was found six years later and added. The marble remained in the courtyard of the palazzo until 1787, when it was transferred to the National Museum of Naples, where it can still be seen today. The first bronze reductions date from the late 16th century, executed in gilded bronze by Pietro da Barga (Metropolitan Museum, NY). It was not until the 18th century, in particular, that the Grand Tour became a veritable craze. The Roman founders Giacomo and Giovanni Zoffoli, as well as Francesco Righetti (1749-1815), produced small, high-quality bronze reductions.
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