- Barberini Faun
The life-size [It is 215 cm long.] marble statue known as the "Barberini Faun" or "Drunken Satyr" is located in the
Glyptothek inMunich, Germany . AFaun is the Roman equivalent of a GreekSatyr . In Greek mythology, satyrs were human-like male woodland spirits with several animal features, often a goat-like tail, hooves, ears, or horns. Satyrs attendedDionysus .History
The sculpture was either carved by an unknown
Hellenistic sculptor of the Pergamene school, in the late third or early second century BCE. [Martin Robertson, "A History of Greek Art" 1975 (Cambridge University Press) vol I, p. 534.] or is a Roman copy of high quality. The statue was found in the 1620s at theCastel Sant'Angelo , Rome, which in Antiquity had beenHadrian ’s Mausoleum. Work on the fortification was undertaken by the BarberiniPope Urban VIII in 1624. The sculpture made its first documented appearance in a receipt for its restoration, 6 June 1628, when it already belonged to Cardinal Francesco Barberini [Haskell and Penny 1981:202.] . When discovered, the statue was heavily damaged; the right leg, parts of both hands, and parts of the head were missing. The historianProcopius recorded that during the siege of Rome in 537 the defenders had hurled down upon theGoths the statues adorning Hadrian's Mausoleum, andJohann Winckelmann speculated that the place of discovery and the statue's condition suggested that it had been such a projectile [Winckelmann, "Storia delle arti del disegno presso gli antichi", edited byCarlo Fea , noted by Haskell and Penny.]It was traditionally asserted that Cardinal Maffeo
Barberini commissionedGianlorenzo Bernini to restore the statue, "but there is no evidence for the tradition that Bernini was in any way involved with the statue," Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny observed in 1981, after reviewing the documentation and literature. Restorations, at first in stucco, were remade in 1679 by Giuseppe Giorgetti and Lorenzo Ottoni, who enabled the antique left leg to be reaffixed and provided the elaborate supporting structure that is illustrated in Paolo Alessandro Maffei's "Raccolta di statue" (1704) [The engraving is reproduced in Haskell and Penny 1981:fig. 16.] ; in the eighteenth century the right leg was again restored in marble, and once more by Pacetti in 1799. (The sculpture is shown today without the restored hanging left arm.)These restorations of the "Barberini Faun" may have enhanced the sexual aspect of the statue. Because of this, the statue has acquired a reputation as an example of homoerotic art. Nudity in Greek art was nothing new; however, the blatant sexuality of this piece makes it most interesting to twentieth-century eyes. His wantonly spread legs focus attention on his genitals:
Maureen Dowd , a "New York Times " columnist, compared the nude photographs ofJeff Gannon he advertised on the Internet to the "Barberini Faun". [Maureen Dowd, "Bush's Barberini Faun", "New York Times", February 17, 2005, page 29.] Not all viewers have found the "Faun" so indecorous: the "Barberini Faun" was reproduced on aNymphenburg porcelain service in the 1830s.The statue was housed in the
Palazzo Barberini , Rome, until it was sold in 1799 to the sculptor and restorerVincenzo Pacetti ; Pacetti offered it to various English and French clients, includingLucien Bonaparte . The Barberini brought suit to annul the sale and eventually sold the "Faun", after much public competition and a ban on its exportation, strongly supported by the antiquarianCarlo Fea and byAntonio Canova — to Ludwig, Crown Prince of Bavaria. Ludwig had planned a special room in the Glyptothek designed by the architectLeo von Klenze before the purchase was even finalized, and it was in place by 1827. The Glyptothek [γλύφειν "glyphein", "to carve".] opened in 1830 to house Ludwig's sculpture collection.A marble copy was sculpted by
Edmé Bouchardon at theFrench Academy in Rome in 1726 ("illustration, right"). Cardinal Barberini desired a plaster cast of it to keep with the antique original. Bouchardon's "Barberini Faun" arrived in France in 1732, greatly admired. In 1775 the duc de Chartres bought it for his elaborate garden plan atParc Monceau . It is now in theLouvre Museum .A gilded copy is included among many other replicas of classical sculptures that adorn the grand cascade that descends from the back of
Peter the Great 's summer palace,Peterhof (Petrodvorets ), outside ofSt. Petersburg ,Russia .Notes
ee also
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Portland Vase andApollo Barberini , also collected by the BarberiniReferences
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Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, 1991. "Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900" (Yale University Press). Cat. no. 33, pp 202-05.
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