Venus Genetrix (sculpture)

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An example of Venus Genetrix (Capitoline Museums)

The Venus Genetrix (also spelled genitrix)

Greeks
.

History

On the night before the decisive

Iulus, the son of Aeneas. It was in part to flatter this connection that Virgil wrote the Aeneid. His public cult expressed the unique standing of Caesar at the end of the Roman Republic
and, in that sense, of a personal association expressed as public cult was the innovation in Roman religion.

Two types, represented in many Roman examples in marble, bronze, and terra cotta, contend among scholars for identification as representing the type of this draped Venus Genetrix. Besides the type described further below, is another, in which Venus carries an infant Eros on her shoulder.[5]

Original

In 420 - 410 BC, the Athenian sculptor

Polyclitean canon.[citation needed
]

Caesar's Venus Genetrix

The now-lost original statue, or Sabina in the same pose, is represented on the reverse of a

Pio-Clementino Museum by comparison with this denarius. "From the inscription on the coins, from the similarity between the figure on the coins and the statue in the Louvre and from the fact that Arkesilaos established the type of Venus Genetrix as patron goddess of Rome, and ancestress of the Julian race, the identification was a very natural one."[8] A Venus Genetrix in the Pio-Clementino Museum has been completed with a Roman portrait head of Sabina, on this basis.[9]

Other copies

A number of the

.

Aphrodite of Fréjus

The Aphrodite of Fréjus at the Louvre

A 1.64 m-high Roman statue, dating from the end of the 1st century BC to the start of the 1st century AD, in Parian marble, was discovered at Fréjus (Forum Julii) in 1650. It is considered as the best Roman copy of the lost Greek work.

The neck, the left hand, the fingers of the right hand, the plinth, and many parts of the drape are modern restorations. It was present in the palace of the Tuileries in 1678, and was transported from there to the park of Versailles about 1685. It was seized in the Revolution, and has thus been in the Louvre since 1803, as Inventaire MR 367 (n° usuel Ma 525). The statue was restored in 1999 thanks to the patronage of FIMALAC.

Hermitage Museum

Another Roman copy of the statue, which is 2.14 m high, was in the collection of Giampietro Campana, marchese di Cavelli, Villa Campana, Rome, from which it was acquired for the Hermitage in 1861, following Campana's disgrace.

The head does not belong to this statue, which must originally have had a portrait head. In Rome, an ideal figure of a divinity might often be adapted slightly (here, for instance the chiton covers the breast) and given a separately made portrait head. Evidence that this was the case here can be seen in the locks of hair falling onto the shoulders. These are also seen in posthumous portraits of Agrippina the Elder, which enables us to date this statue to the second quarter of the 1st century AD.

Notes

  1. ^ Walter (of Châtillon); Marvin L. Colker (1978). Galteri de Castellione Alexandreis. In aedibus Antenoreis. p. xxxi. […] orthographic variants already found in works of classical authors (e.g. monumenta / monimenta, saltem / saltim, genitrix / genetrix, coniunx / coniux)
  2. Pliny's Natural History, vii.126, ix.116, xxxvii.11, Appian
    , Bellum Civile ii.102; these were noted in Dorothy Kent Hill, "Venus in the Roman East", The Journal of the Walters Art Gallery 31/32, (1968/1969:6-12) p. 6 note 1.
  3. Villa Borghese
    (Reinach, Répertoire iii.171.1), which he assigns to the period before 46 BC; and cf. Cornelia G. Harcum, "A Statue of the Type Called the Venus Genetrix in the Royal Ontario Museum" American Journal of Archaeology 31.2 (1927) pp 141‑152.
  4. ^ De Bello Civile 2.68 and 102.
  5. ^ Hill 1968/69 discusses the two contenders, with examples of statuettes at the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore (figs. 1-3).
  6. ^ Many of the replicas are only roughly finished at the back.
  7. ^ "by R.M. Muich, "The Worship of Roman divae: the Julio-Claudians to the Antonines", p 64" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
  8. ^ Cornelia G. Harcum, "A Statue of the Type Called the Venus Genetrix in the Royal Ontario Museum" American Journal of Archaeology 31.2 (April 1927, pp. 141-152) p 144.
  9. ^ "Image of this statue". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
  10. ^ "Sculpture and Heavy Machinery". wings.buffalo.edu. Archived from the original on 31 December 2006. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  11. ^ "Venus Genetrix". dia.org. Archived from the original on 4 April 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  12. ^ "Stoa album". Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
  13. ^ "Venus Genetrix". 7 June 2006.
  14. ^ "Statue of Venus Genetrix (Getty Museum)". www.getty.edu. Archived from the original on 30 November 2005. Retrieved 20 July 2022.

External links

General

Aphrodite of Fréjus

Hermitage