38:
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185:
472:. It entered the Medici collections after a purchase from the Colonna family. The statue lacked arms, head and right leg. The Medici had it integrated by sculptor Silla in 1584 and the statue thus acquired its present aspect as a faithful reproduction of the Capitoline Venus.
456:
A 2nd to 3rd century
Italian marble copy of Capitoline Venus is the result of connecting the lower part of an ancient body, a torso from the 16th century and an ancient face and the top of head. It was previously in the Borghese collection, and now kept at
294:. It bears the signature of Menophantos, a Greek sculptor, apparently of the 1st century BCE, of whom nothing more is known. The Camaldolese coenobites occupy the ancient church and monastery of S. Gregorii in Clivo Scauri founded by
306:
about 580. His foundation was dedicated in honor of the apostle Andrew. By the 10th century
Gregory's name was appended to that of the apostle, whom he eventually supplanted. The sculpture came into the possession of prince
153:
in
Florence grew only slowly, according to Haskell and Penny, fueled in part as a negative sensitivity to extensive restorations began to undermine the Florentine Venus. It was later seized, and relocated to Paris by
69:. The Capitoline Venus and her variants are recognisable from the position of the arms—standing after a bath, Venus begins to cover her breasts with her right hand, and her groin with her left hand.
348:. At the time of its discovery the English in particular found it superior to the Capitoline Venus. After restoration in Rome it was shipped to London, where Prince Augustus gave it to his brother the
489:
A headless painted Roman period marble copy of
Capitoline Venus of the 2nd century from Aphrodias, Asia Minor, was excavated by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (H: 159 cm; W: 60 cm).
806:
696:
72:
This original of this type (from which the following copies derive) is thought to be a lost 3rd- or 2nd-century BCE variation on
Praxiteles' work from
427:
170:. When the original was returned to the Capitoline Museums in 1816, the plaster cast that had replaced it during the Napoleonic era was shipped to
624:
835:
652:
Illustration, National
Archaeological Museum, Athens, gift of M. Embeirikos, 1924, acc. no. 3524; it is sometimes confused with a version of
845:
803:
840:
341:
127:, where it is housed in a niche of its own—called "the cabinet of Venus"—on the first floor of the Palazzo Nuovo on the
815:
431:
203:
378:. The Hadrianic Baths were excavated in the 1920s, and the Lepcitanian copy of the Capitoline Venus was taken away to Europe by
760:
717:
265:
605:
569:
328:, another sculpture of the same model, was unearthed in the spring of 1792 among other sculptures in the excavation of a
357:
510:
TA head from white marble, dated to the last quarter of the 1st century BCE — beginning of the 1st century CE, at
37:
349:
184:
483:
31:
830:
661:
17:
312:
476:
167:
282:
570:"National Gallery of Art. "A Masterpiece from the Capitoline Museum, Rome: The Capitoline Venus""
139:
500:
295:
213:
595:
235:
469:
439:
353:
793:
London, Tate
Gallery Publishing, 1996. no. 228, pp. 269–270. (the Campo Iemini Venus).
547:
8:
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66:
62:
324:
291:
124:
42:
665:
601:
120:
93:
54:
711:
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416:
379:
143:
810:
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482:
A headless statue of
Capitoline Venus made in the 2nd-3rd century is held at the
450:
573:
653:
409:
402:
345:
308:
194:
171:
163:
116:
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type), of which several examples exist. The type ultimately derives from the
517:
A Roman period marble torso, similar to the
Aphrodite Syracuse, held at the
747:
632:
628:
383:
375:
356:. After his death, when Carlton House was replaced by a terrace of houses,
337:
303:
252:
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hands—rather than only one over the groin, in
Praxiteles's original.
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260:
329:
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128:
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438:. It is a headless Imperial Roman copy of a 2nd-century, similar to the
784:
Führer durch die öffentlichen Sammlungen klassischer Altertümer in Rome
264:
A 2nd-century copy of a 4th-century BCE original by Praxiteles, at the
105:
77:
73:
408:
Another armless copy of Capitoline Venus, kept at Jamahiriya Museum,
394:
514:, San Lorenzo Archaeological Museum. Origin: Cremona, p-zza Marconi.
401:
in 1999. and today, it is in the National Archaeological Museum in
155:
97:
445:
A 3rd century copy was found during archaeological excavations at
336:. The dig was directed by the English dealer in Roman antiquities
92:
The Capitoline Venus is a slightly over lifesize marble statue of
777:
Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900.
511:
493:
119:(1670–76) in the gardens belonging to the Stazi near San Vitale.
664:, whose heirs sold it in 1917; Hope's Venus is conserved at the
518:
435:
390:
80:
treatment of the subject and the goddess's modest gesture with
499:
A torso from white marble, 2nd century, unknown provenance at
123:
purchased it from the Stazi family in 1752 and gave it to the
462:
446:
398:
374:
A version of Venus Pudica was also found in Hadrian Baths at
368:
333:
504:
389:. The statue graced the bedroom of his country estate near
76:, which modifies the Praxitelean tradition by a carnal and
660:
completed by Canova on behalf of the British connoisseur
593:
178:
praised it to his students (Haskell and Penny 1981:319).
138:
and was shown in the rotunda of the West Building of the
791:
Grand Tour: the lure of Italy in the eighteenth century
714:
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
492:
A damaged ancient copy of Capitoline Venus is kept at
475:
A 2nd century copy of Capitoline Venus is held by the
763:". State Hermitage Museum. Retrieved on July 5, 2022.
597:
Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology
276:are extant, with most of them displayed in Europe.
676:No. 835 (October 1972), pp. 658-671, esp. p. 667).
162:; the Emperor commissioned a marble replica from
822:
686:"Apo tis en troadi afroditis minofantos epoiei"
344:in partnership with Sir Corbet Corbet of the
750:". Theoi Project. Retrieved on May 13, 2008.
546:According to the memoirs of the antiquarian
775:Haskell, Francis and Nicholas Penny, 1981.
668:(Hugh Honour, "Canova's Statues of Venus",
587:
298:on his own family property, on the slope (
737:Theoi Project. Retrieved on May 13, 2008.
594:Nancy Thomson de Grummond (11 May 2015).
419:, St. Petersburg, as well as the similar
61:(modest Venus) types (others include the
789:Wilton, A. and I. Bignamini (editors.).
619:
617:
259:
36:
104:sculpture that ultimately derives from
14:
823:
503:: Terme di Diocleziano, inv. 2000656,
468:A copy of Capitoline Venus is held at
332:at Campo Iemini, near Torvaianica, in
266:National Archaeological Museum, Athens
614:
550:noted in Haskell and Penny 1981:318).
836:Sculptures in the Capitoline Museums
465:. Inv No. MR. 279 (Usual No Ma 369).
87:
846:Archaeological discoveries in Italy
779:Yale University Press. Cat. no. 84.
342:Prince Augustus, the Duke of Sussex
340:(1761–1816) under the patronage of
146:from June 8 to September 18, 2011.
24:
804:British Museum: Campo Iemini Venus
317:Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums
25:
857:
797:
360:donated it to the British Museum.
841:Roman copies of Greek sculptures
786:. 4th edition, 1963–72, vol. II.
315:described this sculpture in his
243:
234:
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183:
753:
740:
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705:
699:Le Chiese di Roma nel Medio Evo
600:. Routledge. pp. 240–241.
221:
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134:The statue was on loan to the
57:, specifically one of several
27:Statue of Venus (modest Venus)
13:
1:
769:
701:: S. Gregorii in Clivo Scauri
432:Syracuse Archeological Museum
149:Its reputation vis-a-vis the
484:Naples Archaeological Museum
363:A 2nd-century Roman copy of
32:The Capitoline Venus (opera)
7:
449:, an ancient Roman town in
415:One variant is kept at the
30:For the chamber opera, see
10:
862:
816:"Aphrodite of Menophantus"
313:Johann Joachim Winckelmann
115:during the pontificate of
29:
477:National Museum in Warsaw
242:
233:
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761:Aphrodite: Tauride Venus
735:Of Type Capitoline Venus
559:Accession number MC 0409
525:
283:Aphrodite of Menophantos
210:Aphrodite of Menophantos
670:The Burlington Magazine
662:Thomas Hope (1769–1831)
537:1.93 m (6 ft. 3 Âľ in.).
158:under the terms of the
140:National Gallery of Art
53:is a type of statue of
724:, (1870) vol. II.1044.
501:Museo Nazionale Romano
496:Archaeological Museum.
296:Pope Gregory the Great
269:
214:Museo Nazionale Romano
108:(Helbig 1972:128–30).
46:
41:The Capitoline Venus (
470:Galleria degli Uffizi
440:Aphrodite of Syracuse
397:. It was returned to
382:, who gave it to the
292:San Gregorio al Celio
263:
40:
548:Pietro Santi Bartoli
168:Château de Compiègne
111:It was found on the
352:, who set it up at
272:About 50 copies of
160:Treaty of Tolentino
67:Aphrodite of Cnidus
831:Capitoline Venuses
809:2015-10-25 at the
782:Helbig, Wolfgang.
720:2008-05-06 at the
697:Christian HĂĽlsen,
625:"Capitoline Venus"
325:Campo Iemini Venus
270:
191:Campo Iemini Venus
125:Capitoline Museums
47:
43:Capitoline Museums
666:Leeds Art Gallery
607:978-1-134-26854-2
286:was found at the
258:
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121:Pope Benedict XIV
88:Principal example
16:(Redirected from
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572:. Archived from
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417:Hermitage Museum
380:Benito Mussolini
319:(vol V, ch. II).
249:Capitoline Venus
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151:Venus de' Medici
144:Washington, D.C.
63:Venus de' Medici
51:Capitoline Venus
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811:Wayback Machine
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451:North Macedonia
442:kept in Athens.
428:Venus Landolina
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100:copy of a late
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748:Tauride Venus
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350:Prince Regent
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636:. Retrieved
633:Khan Academy
629:Smarthistory
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578:. Retrieved
574:the original
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376:Leptis Magna
338:Robert Fagan
323:
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304:Caelian Hill
299:
281:
274:Venus Pudica
273:
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253:Smarthistory
222:Other copies
209:
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176:John Flaxman
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113:Viminal Hill
110:
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59:Venus Pudica
58:
50:
48:
384:Nazi-leader
330:Roman villa
288:Camaldolese
129:Campidoglio
102:Hellenistic
96:. It is an
18:Menophantos
825:Categories
770:References
580:2011-06-22
358:William IV
106:Praxiteles
78:voluptuous
74:Asia Minor
395:Carinhall
302:) of the
117:Clement X
807:Archived
718:Archived
638:April 9,
507:, Italy.
174:, where
156:Napoleon
98:Antonine
521:Museum.
512:Cremona
494:Antalya
430:at the
403:Tripoli
172:Britain
604:
519:Cyprus
436:Sicily
391:Berlin
300:clivus
526:Notes
463:Paris
447:Skupi
399:Libya
369:Baiae
334:Lazio
309:Chigi
94:Venus
55:Venus
640:2016
602:ISBN
505:Rome
426:The
322:The
280:The
82:both
49:The
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