Kaled, also known as Lara’s Page or Kaled on the Morning
of Lara’s Battle,
by Giuseppe Grandi. 1872-73.
Materials: statue stone,
marble, or terracotta painted white; base red sandstone.
Dimensions: statue
approx. 1.4m high.
Location: 193 Fleet Street, originally the shop of pawnbroker
and jeweler, George Attenborough & Sons, at the west corner of the junction
with Chancery Lane. London, WC2.
As Ward-Jackson explains, Khaled, a woman
dressed as boy page, comes from Lord Byron's poem “Lara,” a tale of disguises
and tragic love.
Ward-Jackson also relates that George Attenborough purchased
the work a decade before he had it placed in a niche created for it.
Grandi, the Alfred Stevens of Italian sculpture, taught the generation that became, in essence, the Italian New Sculptors.
Those he taught and influenced created hundreds of works, particularly in cemeteries in Italy.
The figure on the left holds a spindle and wool in her hands and
looks to the center past a beehive. A spinning wheel is visible behind her knee.
The on the right holds a caduceus, symbol of commerce, in the crook of one arm
while the other touches a tray or table with several small spherical objects,
which could be fruit or balls of wool.
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