Small Venus and Cupid in bronze with translucent... - Lot 72 - Pierre Bergé & Associés

Lot 72
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Estimation :
7000 - 9000 EUR
Small Venus and Cupid in bronze with translucent... - Lot 72 - Pierre Bergé & Associés
Small Venus and Cupid in bronze with translucent brown patina. Italy or England, attributed to Francesco di Virgilio Fanelli (Florence, circa 1585, circa 1661) after a rough model by Jean Bologne, first half of the 17th century Height: 13.9 cm Moulded wooden base. This is a very graceful group inspired by the Little Venus at the Bath, sometimes attributed to Jean Bologne or his workshop. This sculptor was given many models of these young bathers with a serpentine silhouette. This contoured, typically Mannerist attitude is derived from the large standing female figures that Bologna produced around the 1560's. It is assumed that he and his workshop subsequently produced small wax models of these pleasing subjects around the theme of Women in the Bath. These waxes, now destroyed, were then cast in bronze, notably by Susini or Fanelli. The latter, of Italian origin, moved to England to work at the court of Charles I, where he specialized in the production of small bronzes in the Florentine manner. Several examples of this small Venus and Cupid attributed to Fanelli have passed through the art market (Christie's, London, July 1, 1974, lot 84; Sotheby's London, December 14, 2001, lot 57; Sotheby's London, December 10, 2002, lot 98; Sotheby's New York, January 27, 2011, lot 438; Sotheby's Paris, April 16, 2013, lot 26); another one is in the Abbott Guggenheim collection in New York. The one offered here with its refined casting, fine chasing and flowing patina is a particularly outstanding example. Book consulted: 1999 Paris exhibition, Giambologna (1529-1608), the sculpture of the Master and his successors, Galerie Piltzer, cat. C. Avery and M. Hall, p 43-45.
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