Bust of Paris

Description

The enormously popular Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova frequently made replicas or variants of his major works to satisfy the demand for his art. While executing a commission from Empress Josephine of France for a full-length statue of Paris (State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg), Canova carved this bust for his friend Antoine Quatremère de Quincy, a French Neoclassical theorist and critic who greatly influenced the sculptor’s artistic ideals. It depicts the moment in Greek mythology when the shepherd Paris, called upon by Zeus to judge who was the most beautiful among Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite, turns to gaze at the three goddesses. Canova exploited the subject to create an ideal head, balancing the geometry of pure forms with the sensuousness of Paris’s expression. Upon receipt of the gift, Quatremère stated: “There is in [the bust] a mixture of the heroic and the voluptuous, the noble and the amorous. I do not believe that in any other work you have ever combined such life, softness, and chaste purity.” Documents indicate that Canova made four full-length marble statues and at least seven busts of Paris, a clear indication of the sculpture’s popularity.

Provenance

Antoine Chrysosome Quatremère de Quincy (died 1849), Paris, by 1810 [gift from the artist, according to Quatremère de Quincy, 1834]; sold, his estate sale, 14 rue de Condé, Paris, April 22, 1850, lot 2. Sold, Hôtel des Ventes Mobiliéres, Paris, March 15, 1851, lot 48. Madame Chesnet, before 1908; sold, her estate sale, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, December 7–8, 1908, lot 82, to M. (Emilio?) Mihura for 800 francs [see Gazette de l’Hôtel Drouot, December 10–11, 1908]. Pradere family, Buenos Aires, before 1955 [according to letter from Francisco Murature to Hugh Honour, February 10, 1983, in curatorial file]. Casa Pardo, Buenos Aires, by late 1950s [according to source cited above]; sold to Francisco Murature, Buenos Aires, by late 1950s [according to source cited above]. Mary-Anne Martin Fine Art, New York, by early 1980s; sold to the Art Institute, 1984.

Bust of Paris

Antonio Canova

1809

Accession Number

102591

Medium

Marble

Dimensions

69.9 × 30.8 × 28 cm (27 1/2 × 12 1/8 × 11 in.); With socle: 134.7 × 58.5 cm (53 × 23 in.)

Classification

bust/head

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Harold Stuart Endowment; purchased with funds provided by Mrs. Harold T. Martin