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Venus and Adonis
Nollekens, Joseph, born 1737 - died 1823 - Enlarge image
Venus and Adonis
- Object:
Statue
- Place of origin:
England, Great Britain (made)
- Date:
about 1810 (made)
- Artist/Maker:
Nollekens, Joseph, born 1737 - died 1823 (maker)
- Materials and Techniques:
Terracotta
- Museum number:
A.6-1944
- Gallery location:
Sculpture, room 22, case 2
This small study shows Venus trying to persuade her lover, Adonis, not to go hunting for fear that he might be killed (as indeed he was). Venus, the Roman goddess of love and fertility and mother of Cupid, fell in love with Adonis after being accidently grazed by Cupid's arrow.
It may have been executed soon after Nollekens returned to England from Rome, where he spent eight years from 1762 to 1770, working with Bartolomeo Cavaceppi restoring and copying antique marbles. One of his copies, the group of Castor and Pollux, is in the Museum's collection (Museum no. A.59-1940).
He probably perfected his modelling of clay while he was in Rome and started to experiment in making small figures or groups. These occasionally became models for large-scale finished marbles, but many, still in his studio at his death, were simply studies in their own right, which he called pensieri (thoughts).




