Wednesday, December 30, 2015

European bronzes at the Getty, 16th-17th centuries

Caspar Gras
Kicking Horse
ca. 1630
Getty

Bronzes, mostly small in scale, from collections at the Getty in Los Angeles. The earliest was made in 1543 and the latest in 1630. As a group, they span the century when Mannerism was shading into Baroque.

Alessandro Vittoria
Mercury
1559-60
Getty

Italian sculptor
Two Sphinxes
ca. 1560
Getty

Willem Danielsz van Tetrode
Warrior
1562-65
Getty

Hans Mont
Mars & Venus
1580
Getty

Benedikt Wurzelbauer
Neptune
16th century
Getty

Tiziano Aspetti
Nude
ca. 1600
Getty

Italian sculptor
Dog & Bear
ca. 1600
Getty

Adriaen de Vries
Juggling Man
ca. 1615
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after Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Neptune
1620s
Getty

Giovanni Francesco Susini
Abduction of Helen by Paris
1627
Getty

attributed to Francesco Primaticcio
Double Head
ca. 1543
Getty

The final object (an exotic oddity, celebrity-haunted, and new to the museum) has naturally attracted curatorial attention 

"This intriguing sculpture was cast from the female head of the ancient marble statue Cesi Juno (Rome, Capitoline Museum), which Michelangelo described as the most beautiful object in Rome. It may be one of the bronze casts after antique Roman statues that the French king Francis I commissioned from Primaticcio, his court artist for the château at Fontainebleau outside Paris. Double Head is depicted in a print of about 1650 above the entrance to a garden at Fontainebleau. It then passed to several famous collectors, including the 18th-century connoisseur Pierre Crozat and the 20th-century designer Yves Saint Laurent."