- Lady of Elx
The enigmatic "Lady of Elx" ("Dama de Elche" in Spanish, "Dama d'Elx" in
Valencian ) is a polychrome stonebust that was discovered by chance in 1897 at "L'Alcúdia", an archaeological site on a private estate about two kilometers south ofElx (Spanish "Elche ") (Alicante, Valencia, Spain). The Lady of Elx is generally believed to be anIberian piece from the 4th century B.C., though the artisanship suggests strong Hellenistic influences. [Francisco Vives Boix, "La Dama de Elche en el año 2000 : Análisis tecnológico y artístico" [http://www.damaelche.org] . ]culpture
The originally
polychrome d bust is usually thought to represent a woman wearing a very complexheaddress and big coils on each side of the face. A minority interpretation sees it representing a man. The aperture in the rear of the sculpture indicates it may have been used as afunerary urn .While it is a bust, there are proposals that it was part of a seated statue like the "
Lady of Baza " or a standing one like the "Great Offering Lady " fromCerro de los Santos (Montealegre del Castillo , Albacete).The three figures and the "Bicha de Balazote " are exhibited in the same hall in theNational Archaeological Museum of Spain inMadrid .History
The sculpture was found August 4, 1897, by a young worker, Manuel Campello i Esclapez. This "popular" version of the story differs from the official report by Pere Ibarra (the local keeper of the records) which stated that it was Antonio Maciá who found the bust.
Pierre Paris , a French archaeological connoisseur, purchased the sculpture within a few weeks and shipped it to France, where it was shown at theLouvre Museum and hidden for safe-keeping during World War II.The
Vichy government negotiated its return to Spain in 1940 - 41, and June 27, 1941 the sculpture was placed inMuseo del Prado (Madrid), then moved to the National Archaeological Museum, where it remains, in spite of appeals to return it to its home town permanently, where it is represented by a reproduction."Lady of Elx" initiated a popular interest in pre-Roman Iberian culture. She appeared on a 1948 Spanish one-
peseta banknote and was mentioned inWilliam Gaddis 's "The Recognitions" (1955). The sculpture was on display at the Museo Arqueológico y de Historia de Elche from May 18 to November 1 2006.Forgery?
In 1995,
John F. Moffitt published a book contending that the statue was a forgery with pronounced similarities to Symbolist art of theBelle Époque . He delved further into the circumstances of its discovery to put forth a speculation concerning the identity of the forger and commissioner, "a physician and resident surgeon in the town of Elche" who was "well informed about the current state of Iberian studies" and owned "the fertile archaeological site of La Alcúdia". Moffitt's study, published by theUniversity Press of Florida under the title "Art Forgery: The Case of the Lady of Elche" (1995), was favorably reviewed byKaren D. Vitelli in "American Journal of Archaeology" 99.4 (October 1995), p. 755.Most experts, however, believe that the Lady of Elx is a genuine ancient Iberian work. For example, Antonio Uriarte of the University of Madrid has stated, “Decade by decade, research has reinforced the coherence of the Dama within the corpus of Iberian sculpture. The Dama was found more than a century ago, and many of its features, not then understood, have been confirmed by subsequent finds. For example, the use of paint in Iberian sculpture was unknown when the Dama appeared.” [ "Is the Dama de Elche, one of the masterpieces of ancient Iberian art, really a fake?" at [http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/best/bswbBestSubPage.asp?PubID=BSAO&Volume=6&Issue=5&ArticleID=14 ] See also R. Olmos and T. Tortosa, in Gocha R. Tsetskhladze (ed.), "Ancient Greeks West and East", Leiden: Brill, 1999, brief summary here [http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2000/2000-03-20.html] ] A CSIC study on the Lady of Elx's micropigmentation published in 2005 concluded that the trace pigments on the statue were consistent with ancient materials and that no modern pigments had been found. [ M. P. Luxán, J. L. Prada, F. Dorrego, 2005, "Dama de Elche: pigments, surface coating and stone of the sculpture", "Materials and structures", 38(277), pp. 419-424. [https://www.rilem.net/boutique/fiche.php?cat=journal&reference=1645] See also [http://www.springerlink.com/content/g3867m6578u5v27p/] ]
References
External links
* [http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/esanchez/dama.htm Earnest plea to return the "Lady of Elx"]
*es icon [http://www.laalcudia.uafg.ua.es/indexcastellano.html Fundació La Alcudia]
*es icon [http://www.ffil.uam.es/reib/manolo.htm Reflections on the "Lady of Elx"]
*es icon [http://enciclopedia.us.es/index.php/Dama_de_Elche Article] atEnciclopedia Libre
* [http://www.factum-arte.com/eng/conservacion/elche/default_en.asp Facsimile of the Dama de Elche executed by Adam Lowe's studio Factum Arte in Madrid (2002-2005)]
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