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Art Funded



River God

River God (© Fitzwilliam Museum)

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Jean-Jacques Caffieri (1725 - 1792)

Fitzwilliam Museum

1755

This sculpture is a demonstration of supreme virtuosity in 'thinking in terracotta', the method he had inherited from Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne. It is a seriously classical subject, and although its brilliant naturalism and compressed energy hark back to baroque models, Caffieri's terracotta is a contained, closed composition in contrast to the loose expansiveness of Lemoyne's Oceanus. The vase, from which the river water flows, with its neat frieze of shells, is a crisp piece of neo-classical design. Caffieri seems simultaneously to be declaring himself a virtuoso in the French terracotta tradition he had inherited, and asserting his mastery of the new neo-classical mode, of which the Academie de France in Rome had been the seedbed.

  • Medium: terracotta
  • Dimensions: 23 x 37 x 13 cm
  • Art Fund Grant: £21500 ( Total: £86,000)
  • ArtFunded in: 1992
  • Vendor: Daniel Katz Ltd

Provenance

Private Collection, France; Daniel Katz Ltd.


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