Satyress
c. 1525–1528
Giovanni Maria Mosca
Giovanni Maria Mosca (Italian, 1495/99–1574)
European Painting and Sculpture
Satyress, c. 1525–1528. Giovanni Maria Mosca (Italian, 1495/99–1574). Bronze; overall: 16.5 x 11.5 cm (6 1/2 x 4 1/2 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Severance A. Millikin 1947.29 In antiquity, satyrs were lustful woodland deities who delighted in wine and revelry. Renaissance artists adopted them as symbols of vice and carnal love; the female satyr, or satyress, on this bronze plaquette, recently reattributed from Riccio to Mosca, was probably derived from a copper engraving of a Roman sarcophagus by Marcantonio Raimondi (c. 1470/82-1527/34). Both the sarcophagus and subsequent engraving depicted a bacchanalia, or scene of orgiastic carousal; the peculiar objects surrounding the satyress have been added by the artist, possibly in an effort to remove the figure from her lewd original composition and give a more refined meaning. The satyress rests her right hoof upon a plumed helmet. A coiled shape, possibly a snake, winds out of the helmet. To her left, a laurel tree stands with only half of its branches in bloom. Two severed animal legs are tied around its trunk and an illegible plaque hangs from one of its branches. A lyre, a pan pipe, an animal jawbone and a bow are gathered at the base of the tree. The highly allegorical nature of the work uses obscure symbols, rather than a distinct narrative, to convey meaning and could possibly be read as an allegory of physical pleasure overcoming virtue.
- Maker/Artist
- Mosca, Giovanni Maria
- Classification
- Sculpture
- Formatted Medium
- bronze
- Medium
- bronze
- Dimensions
- Overall: 16.5 x 11.5 cm (6 1/2 x 4 1/2 in.)
- Departments
- European Painting and Sculpture
- Accession Number
- 1947.29
- Credit Line
- Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Severance A. Millikin
- Exhibitions
- 35th Anniversary Exhibition, Renaissance Bronzes from Ohio Collections, Nature and Antiquity in the Italian Renaissance, The Persistence of Classicism in Sculpture, Conserving the Past for the Future, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, (fall, 1943-1944): "15th and 16th c. Sculpture in Bronze and Wood, lent by Dr. Ernst Wittman," (no cat.)<br>"Survey of Italian Art," Seattle Art Museum, November 8 to December 8, 1957.<br>Dec 4, 1985-March 2, 1986: "Nature and Antiquity in the Italian Renaissance," Stadtische Galerie-Liebieghaus, Frankfurt, West Germany, cat. no. 158, repr., pp. 456-58
- Rights Statement
- CC0
- Museum Location
- 117A Italian Renaissance
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