- Borghese Hermaphroditus
The Borghese Hermaphroditus represents a subject and sculpture-type that was much repeated in
Hellenistic times and inancient Rome , to judge from the number of versions that have chanced to survive. It derives its name from its best known examples, in marble, which were part of theBorghese collection .The sculpture depicts
Hermaphroditus life size, reclining on a couch, with a form that is is partly derived from ancient portrayals of Venus and other female nudes, and partly from contemporaneous feminised Hellenistic portrayals of Dionysus/Bacchus.Martin Robertson [Robertson, "A History of Greek Art, (1975), vol. I:551-52.] described it as a good early Imperial Roman copy of a bronze original by the later of the two Hellenistic sculptors named Polycles; the original bronze was mentioned in
Pliny's Natural History . [Pliny, "Hist. Nat.", XXXIV.80.]Ancient examples
First example
The first example to be discovered, in the first decades of the seventeenth century, was unearthed in the grounds of
Santa Maria della Vittoria , near theBaths of Diocletian and within the bounds of theGardens of Sallust ; the discovery was made either when the church foundations were being dug (in 1608) or whenespalier s were being planted. [According to two seventeenth-century accounts noted in Haskell and Penny 1981:234.] The sculpture was presented to the connoisseur, CardinalScipione Borghese , who in return granted the order the services of his architectGiovanni Battista Soria and paid for the façade of the church, albeit sixteen years later. In his new Villa Borghese, a room called the 'Room of the Hermaphrodite' was devoted to it.In 1620 [Borghese accounts.]
Gian Lorenzo Bernini , Scipione's protegé, was paid sixty "scudi " for making the buttoned mattress upon which the Hermaphroditus reclines, so strikingly realistic that visitors are inclined to give it a testing prod. [Haskell and Penny, 1981:235.]The sculpture was purchased in 1807 with many other pieces from the
Borghese collection , from principeCamillo Borghese , who had marriedPauline Bonaparte , and was transferred to theMusée du Louvre , where it inspiredAlgernon Swinburne 's "Hermaphroditus" in 1863 [ [http://whitewolf.newcastle.edu.au/words/authors/S/SwinburneAlgernonCharles/verse/p1/hermaphroditus.html Text of "Hermaphroditus"] ] , and where it remains. Another2nd century copy in the Borghese collection, found in 1781, has taken its place at the Villa Borghese.econd example
A third Roman marble variant was discovered in 1880 ("illustration, left"), during building works to make Rome the capital of a newly united Italy. It is now on display at the Museo Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme, Rome.
Other ancient copies
Other ancient copies are to be found at the
Uffizi , Florence, and in theVatican Museums .Modern copies
Many copies have been produced since the Renaissance, in a variety of media and scales. Full size ones were produced for
Philip IV of Spain in bronze, ordered by Velázquez and now in thePrado Museum , and for Versailles (by the sculptorMartin Carlier , in marble). The composition has clearly influenced Velázquez's painting of the "Rokeby Venus ", now in London. [According to Clark, in The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form. Princeton University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-691-01788-3, the Rokeby Venus "ultimately derives from the Borghese Hermaphrodite". Clark, p. 373, note to page 3. See also the entry in: MacLaren, Neil; revised Braham, Allan. The Spanish School, National Gallery Catalogues. National Gallery, London, 1970. pp. 125–9. ISBN 0-9476-4546-2] A reduced-scale bronze copy, made and signed byGiovanni Francesco Susini , is now at theMetropolitan Museum . Another reduced-scale copy, this time produced in ivory byFrançois Duquesnoy , was purchased in Rome byJohn Evelyn in the 1640s [Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, "Taste and the Antique" (Yale University Press) 1981, cat. no. 48 (pp 234ff) "et passim"] .Notes
References
*Haskell, Francis and Nicholas Penny, "Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture, 1600-1900" (Yale University Press) 1981.
External links
* [http://cartelen.louvre.fr/cartelen/visite?srv=car_not_frame&idNotice=887 The first copy, Louvre catalogue page]
* [http://www.class.uidaho.edu/joy/hermaphrodites_at_the_villa_borg.htm Hermaphrodites at the Villa Borghese]
* [http://www.arcigaymilano.org/stampa/rs.asp?BeginFrom=15&ID=2891 Exhibition (in Italian)]
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