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Antonio Canova: a Practitioner of Neoclassicism and Napoleon’s Favorite Sculptor

Antonio Canova: a Practitioner of Neoclassicism and Napoleon’s Favorite Sculptor. Antonio Canova Cupid and Psyche 1787-1793 marble. Antonio Canova Cupid and Psyche 1787-1793 marble. Was this sculpture created for a public or private setting? How can you tell?

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Antonio Canova: a Practitioner of Neoclassicism and Napoleon’s Favorite Sculptor

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  1. Antonio Canova: a Practitioner of Neoclassicism and Napoleon’s Favorite Sculptor

  2. Antonio Canova Cupid and Psyche1787-1793 marble

  3. Antonio Canova Cupid and Psyche1787-1793 marble Was this sculpture created for a public or private setting? How can you tell? Connect it to: DonatelloDavid (front view) c. 1430 bronze

  4. Antonio CanovaThe Penitent Magdalene1796marble, height 94 cmPalazzo Bianco, Genoa Was this sculpture created for a public or private setting?

  5. Antonio CanovaTheseus and the Centaur1804-19Marble, height 340 cmKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna Was this sculpture created for a public or private setting?

  6. Paulina Borghese as Venus Victrix 1804-08 white marble

  7. detail: Pauline Borghese as Venus 1804-08 white marble Not a shy woman, Napoleon's sister commissioned this sculpture of herself. She demanded to be represented as the goddess of love. Her husband, Prince Borghese, was the work’s official patron; he kept this sculpture hidden away in their villa in Rome. People were allowed to look at it only by torchlight (see Gardner, 853-854). This sculpture added to Pauline’s already fairly notorious reputation. The fact that everyone knew about the sculpture and few had seen it, only added to the sculpture’s fame. This is a work that represents an idealized vision of the female form, but Canova has also labored hard to represent the accompanying details of the couch and pillows with extraordinary naturalism.

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