Lely Venus

The Lely Venus

The Lely Venus is a Hellenistic marble statue of the crouching Venus type. It dates from the Antonine period.

History

The statue was originally in the Gonzaga collection in Mantua, where it was inventoried in the Gonzaga collection in 1627[1] Whilst there it was seen by the artist Rubens, who stayed with the Gonzaga family whilst on the continent on diplomatic and art-collecting duties for Charles I of England. It was an important influence on his voluptuous style of painting the female nude, so much so that it appeared at the National Gallery's "Rubens: A Master in the Making" exhibition from 26 October 2005 to 15 January 2006 [2]

Allegory by Peter Paul Rubens, 161213, executed after his stay with the Gonzaga at Mantua, where he saw the Lely Crouching Venus, then in the Gonzaga collection

It was soon purchased from the Gonzagas, in 162728, for Charles I of England,[3] It was remarked in England in 1631 as "the finest statue of all" and valued at 6000 ecus.[4] On the dispersal of Charles's art collections during the Commonwealth, it came into the possession of the painter and connoisseur Sir Peter Lely, from whom it derives its name.[5] Two years after Lely's death (1682), it was re-acquired from his collection for the Royal Collection. It was housed in the Palace of Whitehall at the time of the fire which destroyed that palace on January 4, 1698, and was rescued from the flames.[6] Since 2005 it has been on long-term loan to British Museum, following treatment by their conservators, and is currently on display in gallery 23.[7]

Notes

  1. Published by Carlo d'Arco, Delle Arti e degli artefici di Mantova, II (1857), pp. 16871, noted by A. H. Scott-Elliot, "The Statues from Mantua in the Collection of King Charles I" The Burlington Magazine 101 No. 675 (June 1959, pp. 214, 21827) p 219f, note 18.
  2. Exhibition link and Image of it in the exhibition (Royal Collections report, page 4).
  3. Alessandro Luzio, La Galleria dei Gonzaga venduta all'Inghilterra nel 1627-28 (1913), noted by Scott-Elliot 1959:220 note 19.
  4. "une figure de femme accroupie de marbre, aucuns disent Venus delli Eli, autres Hélène de Troye, c'est la plus belle statue de tous estimée à 6 mille escus": (a marble figure of a crouching woman, called by some the Venus of Elis, by others Helen of Troy, it is the finest statue of all, and is valued at 6000 Ecus) in the letter of the French agent Daniel Nys to Lord Dorchester, 13 June 1631; Scott-Elliot 1959:220; Haskell and Penny 1981:321
  5. In the Commonwealth Sale Inventory it is lot 10, ₤600, with the annotation bought by Lilly the Painter with Severall other his Mats. rarities. (A. H. Scott-Elliot, The Statues from Mantua in the Collection of King Charles I, The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 101, No. 675 (Jun., 1959), pp. 214, 218-227)
  6. Cornelius C. Vermeule, Notes on a New Edition of Michaelis: Ancient Marbles in Great Britain, American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 59, No. 2 (Apr., 1955), pp. 129-150
  7. BM page
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