Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Ancient Marble and Modern Marble at the Prado

Roman sculptor
Antinous
AD 131-132
marble
Prado

Statues and busts of Antinous were mass-produced (like the one above) all across the Roman Empire early in the 2nd century, after the tragic drowning of this young imperial favorite. Collections at the Prado demonstrate that similar mass-production revived in 16th and 17th-century Italy, as European demand for Roman sculpture began to exceed authentic supplies.

Italian sculptor
Antinous
16th century
marble
Prado

Below, an illuminating melange of ancient Roman marbles (made to look newer) and modern Italian marbles (made to look older).

Roman sculptor
Hadrian
ca. AD 130-138
marble
Prado

Roman sculptor
Germanicus
ca. AD 40
marble
Prado

Giovanni Battista Bonanome
Vespasian
ca. 1562-65
marble
Prado

Italian sculptor
Marcus Aurelius
16th century
marble
Prado

Roman sculptor
Dionysus with panther
ca. AD 135
marble
Prado

Roman sculptor
Pugilist
ca. AD 50-70
marble
Prado

Silvio Cosini
Meleager
ca. 1540
marble
Prado

studio of Tullio Lombardo
Youth
ca. 1500
marble
Prado

Vincenzo Grandi
Plato
16th century
marble
Prado

Vincenzo Grandi
Aristotle
16th century
marble
Prado

Italian sculptor
Roman youth
16th century
marble
Prado

Italian sculptor
Bust of a bearded man
16th century
marble
Prado

I am grateful for the beautiful reproductions made available by Museo del Prado.