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Fame and Friendship - Pope, Roubiliac and the Portrait Bust (Paperback)
Loot Price: R528
Discovery Miles 5 280
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Fame and Friendship - Pope, Roubiliac and the Portrait Bust (Paperback)
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Loot Price R528
Discovery Miles 5 280
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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No literary figure of the 18th century was more esteemed than the
poet Alexander Pope, and his sculpted portraits exemplify the
celebration of literary fame at a period when authorship was being
newly conceived and the portrait bust was enjoying new popularity.
Accompanying an exhibition at Waddesdon Manor (The Rothschild
Collection), this publication explores the convergence between
authorship, portraiture, and the sculpted image in particular, by
bringing together a wide range of works that foreground Pope's
celebrity status. Pope took great pains over how he was represented
and carefully fashioned his public persona through images,
published letters, and the printed editions of his works. Eaxmined
alongside some of the most celebrated painted portraits of the
poet, will be a selection of the printed texts which Pope planned
with meticulous care. The core of the publication will consist of
eight different versions of the same portrait bust by the leading
sculptor of the period, Louis Francois Roubiliac. The marble bust
had long been seen as a form appropriate for the celebration of
literary fame and Pope's bust in part imitates those of classical
authors whose works he both translated and consciously imitated in
his own poems. More than any other sculptor, Roubiliac reqorked the
conventions of the bust, transforming it into a genre that was
considered worthy of close and sustained attention. Nowhere is this
seen more tellingly than in his compelling and intense portraits of
Pope. Based on a vividly modelled clay original, the variant marble
versions were carved with arresting virtuosity, recalling Pope's
own phrase,"Marble, soften'd into Life". At the same time, the
image was reproduced by both the sculptor himself and by others, in
a variety of materials. Multiplied and reproduced throughout the
18th century, Pope's bust was the most familiar and visible sign of
his authorial fame. At the same time, it was also used as a way of
articulating friendship - a constant theme in Pope's verse - and
all the early versions of Roubiliac's bust were probably executed
for Pope's closest friends. By bringing together the eight versions
thought to have been executed by Roubiliac and his studio, and a
number of other copies in marble, plaster, and ceramic, this
publication will offer the opportunity to explore not only the
complex relationship between these various versions but the
hitherto little-understood processes of sculptural production and
replication in eighteenth-century Britain.
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