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Bacchante and Infant Faun: Tradition, Controversy, and Legacy: The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, v.77, no. 1 (Summer, 2019)
THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART BULLETIN | VOLUME 77 | NUMBER 1

Bacchante and Infant Faun: Tradition, Controversy, and Legacy

Thayer Tolles
2019
48 pages
52 illustrations
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In just three years, between 1893 and 1896, Frederick William MacMonnies’s Bacchante and Infant Faun evolved from a clay sketch in the artist’s Paris studio to the most controversial sculpture in the United States. Perceptions of the sculpture, which depicts an over life-size dancing woman who gleefully holds an infant in one arm and grapes aloft in the other, still range from provocative to innocuous. This Bulletin provides a close examination of Bacchante and Infant Faun, a work most frequently associated with the scandal that led to its acquisition: the public uproar over the impropriety of the figure’s nudity and her apparent inebriation spurred its original owner, architect Charles McKim, to withdraw it as a gift to the Boston Public Library and give it to The Met instead. While earlier studies focused almost exclusively on the controversy, this Bulletin takes a fresh look at one of the icons of the American Wing, from its origins in the artist's Beaux-Arts training to its place in the rich tradition of the bacchante as a subject of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century art.

Bacchante and Infant Faun, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Bronze, American
1893–94, cast 1894
Standing Female Nude, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Charcoal on paper, mounted on board, American
1885
Diana, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Bronze, American
1888–89; cast 1890
Young Faun with Heron, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Bronze, American
1889–90, cast 1890
Marble relief with a dancing maenad, Kallimachos, Marble, Pentelic, Roman
ca. 27 BCE–14 CE
Bacchante by the Sea, Camille Corot  French, Oil on wood
1865
Bacchus and a Nymph with a Child and Grapes, Clodion (Claude Michel)  French, Terracotta, French, Paris
ca. 1790–1800
Bacchante (Grapes or Autumn), Auguste Rodin  French, Terracotta, wood base, French
ca. 1874
Cupid, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Ivory, lapis lazuli, marble, bloodstone, bronze, silver alloy, gold, translucent enamels, wood, American
1898
Boy and Duck, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Bronze, American
1895–96, cast 1901
Self-portrait, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Oil on canvas, American
ca. 1904
Madonna of Giverny, Frederick William MacMonnies  American, Oil on canvas, American
1901
A Bacchante, Joseph T. Keiley  American, Platinum-palladium print
1899
Bacchanale Russe, Malvina Cornell Hoffman  American, Bronze
1912
A Bacchante, John La Farge  American, Gouache, watercolor, and graphite on off-white wove paper, American
1897
Mars and Bacchante, John Sloan  American, Etching
1915