Храм Дендур будет закрыт с воскресенья, 26 апреля, по пятницу, 8 мая. Метрополитен-музей на Пятой авеню будет закрыт в понедельник, 4 мая.

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Вакханка и младенец фавн

Founder Cast by Thiébaut frères French
1893–94, cast 1894
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 700
Эта работа – яркий образец французского неоклассического стиля, преобладавшего в американской скульптуре конца XIX века. Вакханка, невоздержанная женщина, служительница бога вина Бахуса, несет над головой гроздь винограда и левой рукой поддерживает младенца. Энергичная спиралевидная форма и богатая текстурой поверхность создают превосходный эффект. Мак-Монниз подарил эту статую архитектору Чарльзу Маккиму, поместившему ее во внутреннем дворе Бостонской общественной библиотеки, спроектированной его фирмой. Скульптуры сочли «хмельной и непристойной», в результате Макким передал ее музею Метрополитен.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Название: Вакханка и младенец фавн
  • Художник: Фредерик Уильям Мак-Моннис, США, 1863–1937 гг.
  • Дата: 1893–94 гг., отливка 1894 г.
  • Материал: Бронза
  • Размер: 213,4 x 75,6 x 80 см
  • Благодарность: Дар Чарльза Ф. Маккима, 1897
  • Номер объекта: 97.19
  • Curatorial Department: The American Wing

Audio

Доступно только в: English
Cover Image for 3803. Bacchante and Infant Faun, Part 1

3803. Bacchante and Infant Faun, Part 1

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A nude female figure becomes a spiraling corkscrew in this dynamic sculpture by Frederick MacMonnies. With a skip to her step, and a wide smile, this young woman dangles a bunch of grapes over her head, as the small child in her arms looks up with evident delight.

Consider for a moment the sculptor’s choice of bronze for this figure. Bronze is the ideal medium to capture animated poses and twisting forms—in contrast to the stoic expressions and timeless poses often struck in marble. The title of the work is Bacchante and Infant Faun. Bacchante refers to the followers of Bacchus, the ancient god of wine—symbolized here by the cluster of grapes.

MacMonnies modeled this sculpture in the 1890s as a gift to architect Charles Follen McKim, of the great architectural firm, McKim, Mead, and White. The firm was designing the Boston Public Library, and McKim thought the bronze would provide an appealing centerpiece to the library’s outdoor courtyard. Little did either man anticipate what a backlash this idea would instigate. If you’d like to hear about how this sculpture became the biggest art controversy of the decade, press the green play button.

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