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Damian Campeny Y Estany - The dying Lucretia 1834

art_Campeny Y Estany - Lucretia 1834

Click image for a closer look.

Here some info about this great Sculptor (taken from here):

Damián Campeny y Estrany

(b Mataró, 12 April 1771; d Barcelona, 7 July 1855). Spanish sculptor and teacher. He began studying at the Escuela de Bellas Artes de la Lonja in Barcelona at the age of 14, and he worked in the studio of Salvador Gurri ( fl 1756-1819), a late Baroque sculptor with Neo-classical tendencies. Campeny left the studio after he was attacked by Gurri, who, as a teacher at the Escuela (1785), continued to persecute him and threw him out. Campeny then worked in Lérida, Cervera and Montserrat. He produced his first major work, St Bruno (1795; destr. 1831), in carved polychromed wood. He also trained with Nicolás Traver and José Cabañeras, both late Baroque artists. Stylistically, Campeny began with a moderate and personal naturalism, later assimilating some of the Baroque influences from his Catalan teachers. Readmitted to the Escuela, in 1795 he won a scholarship to complete his studies in Rome, where he went in 1796 and had his own studio for 17 years. He was at the Accademia di S Luca, worked in the restoration department of the Museo Capitolino and also studied with Antonio Canova, who had a decisive influence on his work and became a close friend. In Italy he became such a pure Neo-classicist that he was called the ‘Spanish Canova’. Various works from this period are held at the Lonja in Barcelona, for example Paris (1808) and Campeny’s masterpiece the Dying Lucretia (plaster, 1803; marble, 1834). The collection also contains a statue of the Virgin as Ianua Coeli (1815), made using various hard coloured stones.

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I must say I am totally enchanted by this statue: I want to rush to Lucretia and hold her in my arms to rescue or at least comfort her on her way to the afterlife.

What a great piece of art.


Part of the Art Motive Series: "The Story of Lucretia"

orangeguru (12-09 13:00) | Permalink
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Comments

4 responses to:
'Damian Campeny Y Estany - The dying Lucretia 1834'

Very enjoyable and interesting to be led through a comparison of the interpretation of the story of Lucretia by various artists. I think that I was most taken with this statue by Damián Campeny y Estrany.
The colours in the painting by Titian were, of course beautiful and does portray the brutality very vividly,
the portrayal by Cagnacci captures the sadness
and Mazanti gives the sense of purity to Lucretia.

@Lisa: Thanks for your time and feedback. That statue really is something! What I always find interesting on such history trips is how much the deepth of the emotion in the painting/statue develops over time. The art of Titian and Rembrand looks flat compared to the never stuff - not only from the pure craftmanship of the painting, but also from the emotional impact.

I think the Renaisance really changed European art for good - and added some skills, a new perspective on the human condition and displaying it.

thank you very, very much, dieter! pity, i don’t have the time to read every posting with the necessary attention. and a shame! :(

but it’s on my list!

*smack*

@zoee: Don’t push yourself - these postings are not disappearing over night. Take your time to enjoy and explore them …

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