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Stone pedestal for Silenus with the Infant Bacchus

attributed to French School

Category

Art / Sculpture

Date

c. 1850 - 1900

Materials

Portland stone

Place of origin

France

Collection

Anglesey Abbey, Cambridgeshire

NT 515152.2

Summary

Panelled stone pedestal for bronze statue of Silenus with the Infant Bacchus, probably French, mid to late 19th century, after the antique.

Full description

The marble statue was discovered sometime before 1569 by Carlo Muti on his grounds near the present Cassino Massimo. It entered the Borghese collection in 1613 and remained at the Villa Borghese until 1807 when it sold by Prince Camillo Borghese to his brother-in-law, Napoleon I, and placed in the Louvre. The Silenus was classed among the greatest antique sculptures in Rome and frequently reproduced. A full-size bronze copy was cast in the 1570s for Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici (Uffizi, Florence) and a plaster cast was made for Philip IV of Spain in 1650. A marble replica was made in 1684 for Versailles, joined a year later by a bronze copy by Balthazar Keller (MR 3291). Casts and copies continued to be produced well into the nineteenth century. A large bronze cast by Luigi Valadier (1726–1785) is in the ante-room at Syon House; see also the full-size bronze cast at Petworth House (NT 485298, attributed to the French School, 19th century). The cast was purchased in December 1950 by Lord Fairhaven from the statuary and architectural salvage dealer Bert Crowther. A letter from Crowther dated 22 November 1950 states that the Silenus 'came from the late Lord Melchet, Ireland House, Romsey'. It was sold by Henry Ludwig Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett (1898-1949) at the Colworth House sale of 1947 (lot 1303). Alice Rylance-Watson 2019

Credit line

Anglesey Abbey, The Fairhaven Collection (The National Trust)

Makers and roles

attributed to French School, sculptor

References

Haskell and Penny 1981: Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, Taste and the Antique, The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500 - 1900, New Haven and London, 1981, p. 307, no. 77 (fig 162). Oswald 1930: Arthur Oswald, 'Country Homes and Gardens Old & New: Melchet Court, Romsey, Hampshire, The Seat of Lord Melchett', Country Life, vol. 68, issue 1751, August 9, 1930, pp. 176-83. Roper 1964: Lanning Roper, The Gardens of Anglesey Abbey, Cambridgeshire. The Home of Lord Fairhaven, London 1964, pp. 25, 86, pls. 70, 73. Christie, Manson & Woods 1971: The National Trust, Anglesey Abbey, Cambridge. Inventory: Furniture, Textiles, Porcelain, Bronzes, Sculpture and Garden Ornaments’, 1971, p. 167.

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