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Medusa (Bernini)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Medusa
ArtistGian Lorenzo Bernini
Yearc. 1638-1648 (c. 1638-1648)
Catalogue41
TypeSculpture
MediumMarble
LocationPalazzo dei Conservatori, Rome
Coordinates41°53′36″N 12°28′59″E / 41.89333°N 12.48306°E / 41.89333; 12.48306
Preceded byBust of Thomas Baker
Followed byBust of Cardinal Richelieu

3D model (click to interact)

Medusa is a marble sculpture of the eponymous character from the classical myth. It was executed by the Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Its precise date of creation is unknown, but it is likely to have been executed in the 1640s. It was first documented in 1731 when presented to the Palazzo dei Conservatori in Rome, and is now part of the collections of the Capitoline Museums.

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Transcription

(jazz music) Dr. Zucker: We're in the Capitoline Museums in Rome and we're looking at this gorgeous little sculpture, this bust by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Dr. Harris: It's not really little. Her head looks life size or maybe even slightly larger. Dr. Zucker: Yeah, it is, you're right. It's bigger than life, but I guess after looking at the massive Marcus Aurelius (crosstalk) Dr. Harris: It's a bust. Dr. Zucker: But you're right, it's larger than life and it's of Medusa, so this is a Greek myth. She was one of the three Gorgon Sisters, as portrayed by the Greeks as a monster, who had hair - Dr. Harris: Made of snakes. Dr. Zucker: Snakes, yeah, and here they're writhing. Dr. Harris: And whose gaze turned men to stone, is that right? Dr. Zucker: Yes and in fact, when Perseus beheads her, he uses the reflection in his shield, so that he can attack her without (crosstalk) Dr. Harris: She even, in the 19th century, comes to represent a femme fatale, dangerous. Dr. Zucker: That's right. Dr. Harris: Woman. But here she's depicted so sympathetically. Dr. Zucker: It may be the only time I've seen her less as a threat and more as almost a kind of victim. Dr. Harris: She's so baroque in that she's making this expression that looks very momentary. We've caught her making this expression on her face and this captured sense of time. Because of the realism of the face and this expression, it makes you ... I want to make the expression on her face, of opening my mouth and pushing my brows together and up and as soon as I do that, you get this feeling of being very vulnerable and frightened, almost. Dr. Zucker: She's terrified of herself here. Dr. Harris: Yeah. Dr. Zucker: Imagine what it must feel like to have those snakes writhing around your head always. Dr. Harris: And have anyone who looks at you - Dr. Zucker: Turn to stone. Dr. Harris: What a lonely and terrible existence. These writhing snakes that Bernini has left rather raw, compared with the polish that he's depicted her face with. Dr. Zucker: It's true, he's really smoothed the face, so it's got this brilliant sheen on especially those lips, which almost look wet, so this tension between the monster that she is and there's a humanity that suffers from that. Dr. Harris: The light and the shadow because of the drilling and the depth of the carving of the snakes around her face. Dr. Zucker: That's right, like Michelangelo carving so deeply into the mouth, even. There's no need to carve that deeply, except to create those shadows and those contrasts, then, between light and dark. Look at the depth of those brows. The exaggeration of the nose and the lips and the chin. Dr. Harris: There's an exaggeration in her expression. Dr. Zucker: There is, which makes it all the more powerful, all the more theatrical, all the more baroque. Dr. Harris: The more poignant. (jazz music)

Story

The portrait draws on the myth of Medusa, the snake haired woman whose gaze could turn onlookers to stone. Unlike other depictions of the Medusa, such as Benevenuto Cellini’s Perseus and Medusa, the Medusa is not portrayed as a vanquished figure with her head severed from her body, but as a living monster. Bernini’s decision to create a marble sculpture may be some kind of visual pun on the myth - creating a stone version of a living creature that could turn men to stone.[1]

Creation

Nothing is known about its creation, and parts of the sculpture’s execution undermine Bernini’s authorship of the sculpture, most notable the heavy, exaggerated eyebrows and the rough treatment of the snakes. Yet the sensual fleshy quality of the cheeks and lip, the polished precision of the face, the tormented face of the Medusa and lively intelligence behind the literary concept and its unusual treatment point to the work of Bernini.[2]

Restoration

The bust on display in San Francisco after cleaning and restoration

Considerable technical analysis and restoration of the sculpture took place in 2006.[3] The four month long restoration included non-destructive examination of the sculpture using infrared, ultraviolet and laser scanning as well as traditional photography. The techniques used to create the sculpture were analyzed by studying tooling marks and surface finishes. The bust was gradually cleaned and its surface was restored.[4]

Exhibitions outside Italy

Medusa was shown at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow in May, 2011, as part of the "Year of Italy in Russia".[citation needed] The sculpture was on exhibit in late 2011 and early 2012 at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco.[5] The exhibit was part of the "Dream of Rome", a program displaying art masterpieces from Rome in the United States from 2011 to 2013.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Irving Lavin, Bernini’s Bust of the Medusa: An Awful Pun, La Medusa di Bernini, ed., Elena Bianca di Gioia, pps120-133
  2. ^ Rudolf Wittkower, Bernini, the Sculptor of the Roman Baroque, 1997 (fourth edition)
  3. ^ La Medusa di Bernini, editor: Elena Bianca di Gioia, 2006
  4. ^ "Restoration of the Bust of Medusa by Gian Lorenzo Bernini". Musei Capitolini. 2017. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
  5. ^ Baker, Kenneth (November 26, 2011). "Bernini's 'Medusa' at Legion of Honor". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
  6. ^ "United States exclusive: Bernini's Medusa at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco". All Art News. Barcelona. December 1, 2011. Archived from the original on April 24, 2012. Retrieved December 4, 2011.

External links

Media related to Medusa head attributed to Gianlorenzo Bernini (Rome) at Wikimedia Commons

This page was last edited on 1 November 2023, at 01:01
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