Speranza
Marble statue of MERCURIO
Roman copy of work attributed to Polykleitos
Period: Imperial
Date: 1st or 2nd century
A.D.
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble,
Pentellic
Dimensions:
Overall: 181 x 74.9 x
59.7 cm
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit Line: Gift of the
Hearst Foundation, 1956
Accession Number: 56.234.15
This artwork is
currently on display in Gallery 162
The
left hand, tip of nose, and tips of some fingers of the right hand are
restored.
Roman after Classical Greek original.
Copy or adaptation of a
Greek statue of the late 5th or early 4th century B.C.
The MERCURIO is
almost intact, although the surface was strongly cleaned as was the custom in
the eighteenth century.
During that period, the newly excavated ancient sculpture
was cleaned and restored in a workshop in Roma before being sold to members of the
European nobility.
This work was acquired by the English statesman William
Fitzmaurice, second earl of Shelburne, who assembled a distinguished
collection of antiquities at Lansdowne House in London.
The statue of MERCURIO
once stood in a niche in the dining room at Lansdowne House, serving the same
decorative function that it doubtless once served in a Roman villa of the first
or second century A.D.
The dining room, designed by Robert Adam, is now at the
Metropolitan Museum, where it is installed with other period rooms from
England.
References:
Bothmer, D. 1958. "Roman Marble
Sculptures."
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 16(6): pp. 187, 189.
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