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Art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand
Art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand









This beautiful rendition exudes a remarkable sense of harmony and balance. This version differs from others in the positioning of Venus’ fingers, which are outstretched rather than touching her left arm. Many scholars believe this statue to be the source for the many imitations in existence, which include versions in the Louvre, Paris the Museo Nazionale delle Terme, Rome the Uffizi, Florence the Vatican Museums, and the Royal Collection (acquired by Charles I).īazzanti's figure most closely resembles the marble in the Vatican Museums dating from c.200BC-100BC, which was excavated at Salone in the eighteenth century (and engraved soon after by Francesco Piranesi). In his ‘Naturalis Historia’ the Roman author Pliny the Elder, describes a statue of Venus herself, made by Doidalses and placed in one of the temples of the Portico d’Ottavia in Rome. Venus, the goddess of love and beauty, held immense importance in ancient Roman society, making this sculpture a significant representation of cultural and mythological beliefs of that era. "The Crouching Venus" was a Roman sculpture believed to have been created during the 1st century BCE to the 1st century CE, inspired by earlier Hellenistic works. Among the notable renditions of this ancient masterpiece, the present figure stands out as a testament to the skill and artistry of its creator-Pietro Bazzanti. In the world of sculpture, few works capture the imagination and evoke a sense of timeless beauty like the Crouching Venus.

#Art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand skin

The surface is carved so as to render the skin lifelike and the waxed finish reveals the original patina which has an attractive milky white colour.

art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand

Crouched on one knee, her body gently contorted and leaning slightly forward with her right arm reaching over her left shoulder and extending, a ewer at her feet, on an integral rectangular base with canted corners. Modelled in the round carved from a single block of marble. A Fine Statuary Marble Figure of 'The Crouching Venus' After the Antique, By Pietro Bazzanti, (Italian, 1825-1895).









Art deco bronze double sided picture frame and stand