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Perseus with the Head of Medusa

Coordinates:43°46′09″N11°15′21″E / 43.7692°N 11.2558°E /43.7692; 11.2558
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
16th-century sculpture by Benvenuto Cellini

Perseus with the Head of Medusa byBenvenuto Cellini
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, in theLoggia dei Lanzi, Florence

Perseus with the Head of Medusa is abronzesculpture made byBenvenuto Cellini in the period 1545–1554. The sculpture stands on a square base which has bronzerelief panels depicting the story ofPerseus andAndromeda, similar to apredella on an altarpiece.[1] It is located in theLoggia dei Lanzi in thePiazza della Signoria inFlorence, Italy. The second Florentine duke,Cosimo I de' Medici, commissioned the work with specific political connections to the other sculptural works in the piazza. When the piece was revealed to the public on 27 April 1554,Michelangelo'sDavid,Bandinelli'sHercules and Cacus, andDonatello'sJudith and Holofernes were already installed in the piazza.[2]

The subject matter of the work is the mythological story ofPerseus beheadingMedusa, a hideous woman-facedGorgon whose hair had been turned to snakes; anyone who looked at her was turned to stone. Perseus stands naked except for a sash and winged sandals, triumphant on top of the body of Medusa with her head, crowned with writhing snakes, in his raised hand. Blood spews from Medusa's severed neck. The bronze sculpture, in which Medusa's head turns men to stone, is appropriately surrounded by three huge marble statues of men: Hercules, David, and later Neptune.[2] Cellini's use of bronze in Perseus and the head of Medusa, and the motifs he used to respond to the previous sculpture in the piazza, were highly innovative. Examining the sculpture from the back, one can see a self-portrait of the sculptor Cellini on the back of Perseus's helmet.

Background

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External videos
video iconSmarthistory – Cellini'sPerseus[3]

Cellini was the first to integrate narrative relief into the sculpture of the piazza.[4] As thePerseus was installed in the Loggia, it dominated the dimensions of later pedestals of other sculptural works within the Loggia, likeGiambologna'sRape of the Sabine Women.[5]Perseus added to the cast ofOlympian gods protecting the Medici.[6] Weil-Garris also focuses on the pedestal beneath the sculpture in the round. However, the present pedestal may not have been Cellini's original intent, as the relief was still being worked on and installed when the bronze sculpture above had already been revealed.[7] The Medici still dominated the theme of the pedestal asPerseus in the pedestal is an allegory for DukeFrancesco Medici.[8]

The base of the sculpture, Perseus's feet on the slain Medusa's headless corpse

The politics of the Medici and Florence dominate the Piazza della Signoria, specifically making reference to the first three Florentine dukes. DukeAlessandro I was the first Florentine duke, andHercules and Cacus was revealed during his time, meeting with a terrible reception by the public in 1534.[9] The next sculpture to be revealed was Cellini'sPerseus and Cosimo I was very cautious about the public's reaction to the piece.[9] Fortunately, the public received the sculpture well, as Cosimo watched the reception from a window in thePalazzo Vecchio.[4] The third duke is directly related to the sculpture's relief panel on the base as thePerseus can be seen as a symbol for Duke Francesco and Andromeda as his Habsburg bride, Giovanna.[10] Similarly, Andromeda acts as an allegory for Florence, while Perseus is the collective Medici swooping down to save the city.[11] Cellini chose to represent the sad side of the story of Andromeda; however, he created a focus on the Medici, like Perseus, saving the unsmiling Andromeda.[12] Every sculpture in the piazza can be seen as politically or artistically related to one another and to the Medici.

The work

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At the time the sculpture was created, bronze had not been used in almost half a century for a monumental work of art. Cellini made the conscious decision to work in this medium because by pouring molten metal into his cast, he was vivifying the sculpture with life-giving blood.[13] The most difficult part would be completing the entire cast all at once. Donatello'sJudith and Holofernes was already placed in the Loggia dei Lanzi in the westernmost arch.[14]Judith had been cast in bronze, but in several sections joined together.[15] Cellini was competing against monumental works of marble sculpture like Michelangelo'sDavid and wanted to make a statement for himself and his patron, Cosimo I.

Michael Cole specifically draws attention to the process of casting thePerseus. Citing Cellini'sVita, Cole notes how Cellini's assistants let the metal clot, and had Cellini not been present the work would have been destroyed.[16] Cole then asserts that Cellini goes beyond reviving the work but raised the dead, in which he means that Cellini's salvation was remelting the bronze.[17] Cellini also invokes Christ and by doing so he breathes life into the sculpture.[18] Casting thePerseus was more than meeting the demand of Cosimo I; Cellini was proving himself to Florence in a newly refurbished medium.

Perseus was one of Cellini's crowning works, completed with two different ideas in mind. He wanted to respond to the sculpture already placed within the piazza, which he did with the subject matter of Medusa reducing men to stone. Secondly, the Medici were represented byPerseus, both in the round sculpture and the relief below. Moreover, in that respect, Cellini also made a statement for himself in the actual casting ofPerseus. Cellini breathed life into his new sculpture through his use of bronze and he asserted Medici control over the Florentine people through the Perseus motif.

A bronze cast of the sculpture was made in the early 19th Century and installed at Trentham Gardens, Staffordshire, England around 1840, where it is now a Grade II* listed structure.[19][20]

Depictions by other artists

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Shearman, “Art or Politics,”.
  2. ^abShearman, p. 28.
  3. ^"Cellini's Perseus". Smarthistory at Khan Academy. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2023.
  4. ^abWeil-Garris,On Pedestals, p. 411.
  5. ^Weil-Garris, p. 413.
  6. ^Weil-Garris, p. 409.
  7. ^Weil-Garris, p. 411.
  8. ^Mandel,Perseus and the Medici, 175.
  9. ^abMandel, p. 168.
  10. ^Mandel,Perseus and the Medici, p. 175.
  11. ^Mandel, p. 175.
  12. ^Burne-Jones,Andromeda, 211.
  13. ^Cole,Cellini’s Blood, 221.
  14. ^Cole, p. 217.
  15. ^Cole, 220.
  16. ^Cole, p. 221.
  17. ^Cole, p. 221
  18. ^Cole, p. 222.
  19. ^"Historic England listing".Historic England.
  20. ^"Perseus image gallery".Visit Stoke.

References

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  • Burne-Jones, Edward. “ ‘Andromeda’: Transformation of Historical and Mythological Sources.”Artibus et Historiae 25, no. 49 (2004): 197–227.
  • Cole, Michael. "Cellini's Blood."The Art Bulletin 81, no. 2 (1999): 215–235.
  • Mandel, Corinne. "Perseus and the Medici." Storia Dell'Arte no. 87 (1996): 168–187.
  • Shearman, John.Art Or Politics in the Piazza? Benvenuto Cellini. Kunst und Kunsttheorie im 16. Jahrhundert (2003): 19–36.
  • Weil-Garris, Kathleen.On Pedestals: Michelangelo's David, Bandinelli's Hercules and Cacus and the Sculpture of the Piazza Della Signoria. Römisches Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte 20, (1983): 377–415.

External links

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43°46′09″N11°15′21″E / 43.7692°N 11.2558°E /43.7692; 11.2558

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