19th century French school of the Grand Tour
"Dionysus" and "Maenad".
Pair of sculptures in patinated bronze.
Marble bases.
Measurements: 45 cm. and 37 cm. (height).
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DESCRIPTION
19th century French school of the Grand Tour.
"Dionysus" and "Maenad".
Pair of sculptures in patinated bronze.
Marble bases.
Measurements: 45 cm. and 37 cm. (height).
Both figures, of medium format, represent with extraordinary delicacy and energy the Dionysian spirit: the celebration of wine, dance and vital joy. One of them, maenad or bacchante, drains wine in a cup that she holds in one hand, while with the other arm she raises a jug. Her pose is light, almost dancing, with an elegant twist of the torso and an ascending rhythm that runs through the whole body. The naked torso and the diadem that adorns her head evoke the classical representations of the maenads or companions of Dionysus, ecstatic figures that embodied the sensuality and freedom of the Bacchic cult.
The other sculpture, more ambiguous in its representation, shows a young man or woman of androgynous beauty, raising a bunch of grapes with one hand and looking at it with a gesture of serene ecstasy. Her contrapposto posture, with one foot barely raised and the body slightly curved, conveys a sense of restrained movement and classical harmony. The cloth discreetly covering the pubis and the hair crowned with bunches of vines reinforce his Dionysian identity, while his sexual ambiguity could directly allude to Dionysus himself, god of wine and of the transgression of the limits between masculine and feminine.
These sculptures are representative of the Grand Tour style, a trend that, during the 19th century, promoted the creation of copies, reinterpretations and adaptations of Greco-Roman statuary for cultured collectors and European travelers. French academicism is evident in them, with its attention to precise anatomical modeling, the neatness of the surface of the patinated bronze and the search for a balance between naturalism and idealization. The pair of bronzes combines the classical erudition and refined sensuality of late neoclassical taste with the decorative elegance that seduced the travelers of the Grand Tour: works that evoke the splendor of Antiquity, interpreted with the technical sophistication and tastes of the nineteenth century.
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