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The Diana of Versailles or Artemis, Goddess of the Hunt (French: Artémis, déesse de la chasse) is a slightly over-lifesize[1] marble statue of the Roman goddess Diana (Greek: Artemis) with a deer. It is currently located in the Musée du Louvre, Paris. The statue is also known as Diana with a Doe (French: Diane à la biche), Diana Huntress (French: Diane chasseresse), and Diana of Ephesus. It is a partially restored Roman copy (1st or 2nd century AD) of a lost Greek bronze original attributed to Leochares, c. 325 BC.[2][3]

The Diana of Versailles in the Louvre Galerie des Caryatides that was designed for it
The Diana of Versailles in the Louvre Galerie des Caryatides that was designed for it

Description


Diana is represented at the hunt, hastening forward, as if in pursuit of game. She looks toward the right and with raised right arm is about to draw an arrow from her quiver. Her left arm has been restored, and a deer has been added at her feet, although one might have expected a dog.[4] Her left hand is holding a small cylindrical fragment, which may be part of what was once a bow. She wears a short Dorian chiton, a himation around her waist, and sandals.


History


The statue was given by Pope Paul IV to Henry II of France in 1556[5] with a subtle but inescapable allusion to the king's mistress, Diane de Poitiers. It was probably discovered in Italy. One source suggests the Temple of Diana (Nemi), an ancient sanctuary;[6] another posits Hadrian's Villa at Tibur.[7]

"Alone amongst the statues exported from Italy before the second half of the seventeenth century the Diane Chasseresse acquired a reputation outside Italy equivalent to the masterpieces in the Belvedere or the Villa Borghese",[8] though its admirers generally confused it with the Artemis at the temple of Ephesus.[9] It was installed as the central feature of the Jardin de la Reine (today's Jardin de Diane) laid out west of the Galerie des Cerfs at the Château de Fontainebleau; there it was the most prominently displayed and among the first Roman sculptures to be seen in France.

In 1602, Henri IV removed it to the Palais du Louvre, where the Diana was installed in a gallery specially designed to receive it, the Salle des Antiques (now the Salle des Caryatides). At the time, its restorations were revised by Barthélemy Prieur. In 1696 it was installed in the Grande Galerie (Hall of Mirrors) of Versailles by Louis XIV.[10] As one of France's greatest treasures, the Diane Chasseresse returned to the Louvre in An VI (1798) of the French Republican calendar (Haskell and Penny 1981:196).[11][12] It was restored once more, in 1802, by Bernard Lange.[13]


Fountain of Diana at Fontainebleau


A bronze copy of 1684 was installed on the garden fountain at Fontainebleau in 1813.
A bronze copy of 1684 was installed on the garden fountain at Fontainebleau in 1813.

In 1605, after the marble Roman statue had been removed from Fontainebleau, Barthélemy Prieur cast a replacement, a bronze replica which was set upon a high Mannerist marble pedestal, part of a fountain arranged by the hydraulics engineer Tommaso Francini in 1603. The fountain incorporated bronze hunting dogs and stag's heads spitting water, sculpted by Pierre Biard [Wikidata], and was located in the Jardin de la Reine, with a parterre surrounded by an orangery.[14][15]

At the time of the French Revolution, Prieur's bronze was sent to the Louvre, but in 1813, Emperor Napoleon offered it to Empress Joséphine to decorate her Château de Malmaison. At the same time, he ordered the present bronze, a replica cast by the Keller brothers in 1684 and formerly at the Château de Marly (demolished 1806), be placed on the fountain at Fontainebleau. Prieur's bronze was later returned to the Louvre and only in the 20th century was it brought back to Fontainebleau, where it was placed in the Galerie des Cerfs.[15]


Other replicas


Comparable Roman replicas of the same model, noted by the Louvre's website, have been found at Leptis Magna (Libya), at Antalya (Turkey) and also Annaba (Algeria).

Besides the modern era replicas by Prieur and the Keller brothers, a full-size bronze replica was made in 1634 by Hubert Le Sueur for Charles I of England, the brother-in-law of Louis XIII.[16] For Marly, a marble copy was executed by Guillaume Coustou in 1710. In the second half of the 18th century, numerous replicas of all sizes were created in bronze, plaster, and lead (Haskell and Penny 1981:197).

A miniature replica of the statue stood on the fireplace mantle in the Titanic's first class lounge. In 1986, Robert Ballard discovered and photographed the statue on the sea floor near the bow section of the wreck.


Notes


  1. The statue stands 2.01 meters in height.
  2. I. Leventi, "Leochares", vol. 19, pp. 169–170, in The Dictionary of Art, 34 volumes, edited by Jane Turner. New York: Grove. ISBN 9781884446009.
  3. "Artemis with a Doe", The Louvre Museum. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  4. Anonymous 1996, p. 90.
  5. "Diane à la biche", Château de Fontainebleau; Musée du Louvre on-line catalogue. The former website cites a 1968 manuscript by Boris Lossky, intended for the Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire de l’art Français. Other sources (Haskell and Penny 1981, p. 196; Anonymous 1996, p. 90) give 1586 as the earliest certain date the statue is known to have been at Fontainebleau (mentioned by the Dutch traveller Van Buchell [Haskell and Penny]) and was reported in the 17th century to have come from the Château de Meudon.
  6. Richard Cooper (2016). Roman Antiquities in Renaissance France, 1515–65, p. 189. Routledge. ISBN 9781317061861.
  7. "Choice examples of Classic sculpture: Diana, after p. 274 in Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, translated by Henry Reeve, revised edition, vol. 1. New York: The Colonial Press, 1900.
  8. Haskell and Penny, 1981, p. 196.
  9. The error was forcefully refuted by Jean-Aymar Piganiol de La Force, Nouvelle description des châteaux et des parcs de Versailles et de Marly (Paris, 1713), Haskell and Penny note (1981:196).
  10. Date according to the Musée du Louvre on-line catalogue.
  11. Accession number 589.
  12. Anonymous 1996, p. 90: "Numerous copies of the statue from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries attest to its popularity during that era, but the work is widely ignored today."
  13. Lange is also credited with the first restorations to the Venus de Milo
  14. The orangery was swept away under Louis-Philippe.
  15. "Diane à la biche", Archive copy (22 April 2021), Château de Fontainebleau; Jean-Marie Pérouse de Montclos, Le château de Fontainebleau (Paris: Scala, 2009), p. 212.
  16. It is now at Windsor Castle.

References





На других языках


[de] Diana von Versailles

Als Diana von Versailles wird eine etwas mehr als lebensgroße Statue aus Marmor der römischen Göttin Diana bzw. der griechischen Göttin Artemis mit einem Hirsch bezeichnet. Sie steht im Pariser Louvre in der Galerie des Caryatides, einem eigens für die Statue entworfenen Raum (Inventarnummer Ma 589). Es handelt sich dabei um eine römische Kopie hadrianischer Zeit (1. Hälfte 2. Jahrhundert n. Chr.) einer verlorenen griechischen Bronzestatue aus der Zeit um 340–320 v. Chr., die Leochares zugeschrieben wird (siehe Artemis von Versailles).
- [en] Diana of Versailles

[es] Diana de Versalles

La Diana de Versalles, conocida también como Diana cazadora (Diane Chasseresse), Artemisa de la caza o Diana con la cierva (Diana à la Biche), es una estatua en mármol de la diosa griega Artemisa (en la mitología romana: Diana) que se encuentra en el Museo del Louvre, en París.[1][2]Representa a la diosa en movimiento, con la mano izquierda descansando sobre la cornamenta de un pequeño ciervo y la derecha en su carcaj. La estatua, que tiene un tamaño ligeramente mayor al natural,[3]es una copia romana perteneciente al siglo I o II de un original griego en bronce que se perdió. La obra original está fechada aproximadamente en 325 a. C. y pertenecía al segundo clasicismo.[1]Su autoría se atribuyó durante mucho tiempo a Leocares,[4]aunque también se ha propuesto a Praxíteles como el autor del bronce griego.

[it] Diana di Versailles

La Diana di Versailles è una statua di marmo, poco più grande della grandezza naturale[1], raffigurante la dea greca Artemide (Diana nella mitologia romana) con un capriolo. L'opera si trova al Museo del Louvre di Parigi. È una copia romana (I-II secolo d.C.) da un originale bronzeo greco, attribuito a Leocare (325 a.C. circa) andato perduto. La statua è anche nota come Diane à la biche (in francese Diana della cerva), Diane Chasseresse (Diana cacciatrice), Artemide della caccia oppure Artemide con la cerva.

[ru] Диана Версальская

Диана Версальская, Диана-охотница, или Артемида (фр. La Diane de Versailles, Diane chasseresse, Artémis) — древнеримская мраморная статуя первой половины II в. н. э., времени правления императора Адриана, воспроизводящая произведение раннеэллинистического скульптора, выполненное в бронзе, возможно, работы афинского скульптора Леохара (ок. 325 г. до н. э.)[1]. Cкульптура изображает идущую богиню охоты Артемиду, положившую руку на рога оленя. Экспонируется в центре Зала Кариатид парижского Лувра (348-й зал Крыла Леско, инвентарный номер Ma 589). Одноимённый экземпляр находится в фондах музея.



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