Join 33,000+ Looksmaxxing Members!

Register a FREE account today to become a member. Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox.

  • DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT TREATMENT WITHOUT LICENCED MEDICAL CONSULTATION AND SUPERVISION

    This is a public discussion forum. The owners, staff, and users of this website ARE NOT engaged in rendering professional services to the individual reader. DO NOT use the content of this website as an alternative to personal examination and advice from licenced healthcare providers. DO NOT begin, delay, or discontinue treatments and/or exercises without licenced medical supervision. Learn more

Story i loved this image

The mythological story of Psyche, who was granted immortality after many trials and is taken by Mercury, the messenger of the gods, to Olympus in order that she may marry her beloved, Cupid, was popular among the Mannerist sculptors. Adriaen de Vries, a talented pupil of Giambologna, made the most famous large bronze of Mercury and Psyche in 1593 for the Prague court of the Habsburg Emperor Rudolph II. Other bronzes on the same subject are known from the circle of Hubert Gerhard, a Dutch artist who also studied in Italy. Caspar Gras, a German-born Austrian sculptor, was a member of Gerhard's workshop, and followed his master as Court Embosser at the Innsbruck residence of the Habsburg archdukes. Although he never travelled to Italy, he was markedly influenced by Giambologna at second hand thanks to his apprenticeship with Gerhard. Moreover, he was able to study his renowned Florentine predecessor's small bronzes in the ducal collection.The Budapest Mercury and Psyche is an inventive derivation both of Giambologna's Mercury in Flight and the female figure from his r**e of a Sabine. The two entwined, seemingly weightless figures are characteristic of the idiom of Mannerist artists, and the sculptor was clearly untroubled at producing the scene in bronze, a medium that is hardly associated with airiness. The casting of the Budapest group is uncommon: the two figures were cast separately and only soldered together after finishing the work on the surfaces. The same technique was used for the variant of this work in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, and the method characterises other small bronzes by Gras, reflecting a casting technique strikingly different to contemporary Italian practice.
 
The mythological story of Psyche, who was granted immortality after many trials and is taken by Mercury, the messenger of the gods, to Olympus in order that she may marry her beloved, Cupid, was popular among the Mannerist sculptors. Adriaen de Vries, a talented pupil of Giambologna, made the most famous large bronze of Mercury and Psyche in 1593 for the Prague court of the Habsburg Emperor Rudolph II. Other bronzes on the same subject are known from the circle of Hubert Gerhard, a Dutch artist who also studied in Italy. Caspar Gras, a German-born Austrian sculptor, was a member of Gerhard's workshop, and followed his master as Court Embosser at the Innsbruck residence of the Habsburg archdukes. Although he never travelled to Italy, he was markedly influenced by Giambologna at second hand thanks to his apprenticeship with Gerhard. Moreover, he was able to study his renowned Florentine predecessor's small bronzes in the ducal collection.The Budapest Mercury and Psyche is an inventive derivation both of Giambologna's Mercury in Flight and the female figure from his r**e of a Sabine. The two entwined, seemingly weightless figures are characteristic of the idiom of Mannerist artists, and the sculptor was clearly untroubled at producing the scene in bronze, a medium that is hardly associated with airiness. The casting of the Budapest group is uncommon: the two figures were cast separately and only soldered together after finishing the work on the surfaces. The same technique was used for the variant of this work in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, and the method characterises other small bronzes by Gras, reflecting a casting technique strikingly different to contemporary Italian practice.
TLDR?
 
Helenistic art (previous to roman empire) was already top notch. Not that it is the case
 

Similar threads


Back
Top