File:Silenus Holding the Infant Bacchus.jpg

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English: Bronze sculpture, Silenus holding the Infant Bacchus, French School, early 19th century. A bronze copy of the Imperial Roman marble statue group in the Louvre, Paris, discovered in Rome about 1569 and purchased in 1807 by Napoleon from the Villa Borghese, Rome. This copy, brought by the 3rd Earl, stood in 1835 at the centre of the South Corridor of the North Gallery.

An engraving published in 1594 states that (the original) of this statue was in the collection of Carlo Muti who, according to Flaminio Vacca, writing in the same year or earlier, had discovered it together with the Borghese Vase at his estate near the present Casiuno Massimo, part of the site of the gardens of Sallust and this must have been before 18 September 1569 when Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici wrote to Carlo Muti thanking him for permission to have his Faun moulded. The statue is described by Francucci as in the Borghese collection in 1613; it was in the Villa Borghese by 1638, and by 1650 was in a room there named after it. The 'Silenus' was purchased on 27 September 1807, together with the bulk of the Borghese antiquities, by Napoleon Bonaparte, brother-in-law of Prince Camillo Borghese. It was sent from Rome between 1808 and 1811 and was recorded in the latter year in the Salle d'Apollon in the Musee Napoleon. By 1815 it was in a room named after it. The 'Silenus' was one of the most consistently admired antique statues in Rome both for the quality of the design and the charming sentiment. It was classed on occasion with the 'Venus de'Medici', the 'Farnese Hercules' and the 'Antinous' and it was frequently reproduced. The Sileni were originally spirits of wild nature rather like satyrs, but by the 6th century BC Silenus appears on the Francois Vase as a bearded man with horse-ears, and he becomes associated with the god Dionysus (Roman Bacchus) and is sometimes said to have been his tutor. He possesses special knowledge and wisdom which is inspired by wine drinking, and therefore he is generally drunk.

Bought by the 3rd Earl. By descent, until the death in 1952 of the 3rd Lord Leconfield, who had given Petworth to the National Trust in 1947, and whose nephew and heir, John Wyndham, 6th Lord Leconfield and 1st Lord Egremont (1920-72) arranged for the acceptance of the major portion of the collections at Petworth in lieu of death duties (the first ever such arrangement) in 1956 by H.M.Treasury.
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/184393744@N06/51628368806/
Author MumblerJamie

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by MumblerJamie at https://flickr.com/photos/184393744@N06/51628368806. It was reviewed on 18 May 2022 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-sa-2.0.

18 May 2022

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current17:06, 18 May 2022Thumbnail for version as of 17:06, 18 May 20223,000 × 4,000 (4.12 MB)Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by MumblerJamie from https://www.flickr.com/photos/184393744@N06/51628368806/ with UploadWizard

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