Colonna Venus
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The Colonna Venus is a Roman marble copy of the lost Aphrodite of Cnidus by Praxiteles, conserved in the Museo Pio-Clementino as part of the collections of the Vatican Museums. It is the best-known and perhaps most faithful Roman copy of the most renowned sculpture of Antiquity.
The Colonna Venus is one of four marble Venuses presented in 1783 to Pope Pius VI by Don Filippo Giuseppe Colonna (1760-1818);[1] this, the best of them, was published in Ennio Quirino Visconti's catalogue of the Museo Pio-Clementino, identified for the first time as a copy of the Cnidian Venus. Immediately it eclipsed the somewhat flaccid variant of the same model that had long been in the Vatican collections.[2] During the 19th and early 20th centuries, a prudish tin drape was modestly wrapped around the legs of the Colonna statue[3] - this was removed in 1932 (Haskell and Penny 1981:331), when the statue was removed to the Gabinetto delle Maschere where it may be seen today.
[edit] Notes
- ^ L1.Don Filippo III Giuseppe Colonna, principe di Paliano and hereditary Gran Connestabile of Naples; see Haskell and Penny 1981:331, as "the Conestabile Colonna".
- ^ The Vatican Venus was first referred to in a document of 1536, as a recent gift to the Pope from the Governor of Rome. Though provided with stucco drapery, it was removed from public view by Pope Gregory XIV, "nemico di ogni nuditá dell'arte" and placed in storage, all access to it forbidden; it remains in storage at the Vatican Museums today. (Francis Haskell and Nicolas Penny, Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900 (1981), cat. no. 90, pp 330-31).
- ^ "by a misplaced sense of pretended decency" Adolf Michaelis wrote, in "The Cnidian Aphrodite of Praxiteles", The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 8 (1887), p 324.