Eve listening to the voice thumbnail 1
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Sculpture, Room 22, The Dorothy and Michael Hintze Galleries

Eve listening to the voice

Statue
1842 (carved)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This figure depicts Eve listening to the voice of Adam (previously described as Eve listening to Satan) in the Garden of Eden, a subject inspired by Book IV of John Milton's religious epic poem Paradise Lost (1667). Edward Hodges Baily's 1842 marble follows from his earlier illustration from Milton, Eve at the Fountain (plaster model from about 1818, marble 1821) which earned him full membership of the Royal Academy and was one of the most famous British sculptures at the time.

Having been absorbed in her own reflection, Eve turns to Adam to describe: 'As I bent down to look, just opposite/ A Shape within the watery gleam appeared,/ Bending to look on me. I started back, /It started back but/Pleased it returned as soon with answering looks/ Of sympathy and love.' Adam in turn tells her ‘What thou seest,/ What there thou seest, fair creature, is thyself’.

Baily’s Eve at the Fountain (a version of which, signed and dated 1822, is in the Bristol City Art Gallery; the plaster in the V&A collections, Museum no. A.3-2000) is inspired, in composition and neoclassical style, by a celebrated classical sculpture, the Nymph with a shell (Paris, Musée du Louvre). A second century CE Roman copy from a Greek original from the second century BCE, it was much admired from the 17th century onwards, and reproduced in marble and plaster. Eve Listening to the Voice largely reproduces Baily’s early composition, but for the position of the head and left hand. In the former version, Eve is looking down, absorbed by her own reflection. In the later version, she looks up and raises her hand, in gestures expressive of the act of listening and talking.

In a lecture delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, the sculptor Henry Weekes commented that Baily, 'an earnest pupil of Flaxman, was a more finished modeller than his master, though with less feeling and sentiment, and less power in design. What he gained by the means I have alluded to, was knowledge, not genius, and it carried him a great way: the latter, even his great teacher could not impart to him, though he obtained under his tuition much that we may designate as purity of style and taste. You may think it strange in me if I say that, notwithstanding he produced one of the most beautiful examples of English ideal Sculpture as yet known to us - his Eve - he was wanting in genius!' This figure was also reproduced in Parian ware (a granular porcelain), and Baily also made busts taken from this model.

Edward Hodges Baily (1788-1867) was British sculptor and designer. As son of a ship’s carver he began his career as a modeller in wax. He spent seven years in John Flaxman’s studio, acknowledged as his favourite and most devoted pupil. He attended the Royal Academy Schools. He is the sculptor of the Nelson on Nelson's Column, of about half the sculpture for Marble Arch, some of the exterior work on Buckingham Palace, and a number of monuments in St Paul's and Westminster Abbey, just to name a few. The work that brought him fame was Eve at the Fountain first shown in 1818 at the Royal Academy.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleEve listening to the voice (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Marble
Brief description
Statue, marble, Eve listening to the voice, by Edward Hodges Baily R.A., England, 1842
Physical description
Eve, as a naked female figure, is shown seated, her body partly resting on her right arm. Tilting her body to the right, she lifts and turns her head, her left arm raised in the air. Her inclined head, lightly parted lips and raised eyes are all expressive of the act of listening. The piece is signed and dated on the integral base at the back of the figure.
Dimensions
  • Height: 96.5cm
  • Weight: 409kg
Gallery label
Edward Hodges Baily (1788–1867) Eve Listening to the Voice of Adam Signed and dated 1842 This sculpture illustrates a scene from John Milton’s poem, ‘Paradise Lost’. Turning to Adam to describe ‘a shape within the watery gleam’, Eve is told it is her own reflection. Critics admired her parted lips and raised eyes, ‘as if every sense were occupied in the work of listening’. Baily was re-interpreting his earlier work, Eve at the Fountain (about 1818), one of the most famous sculptures of the time. London Marble(2021)
Credit line
Given by Wynn Ellis, Esq.
Object history
Given by Wynn Ellis Esq. in 1875. Transferred on loan from the Department of Architecture and Scultpure to Bethnal Green Museum in 1928; returned to the Schulpture Department in 1987.
Subject depicted
Literary referenceInspired by John Milton's epic poem, Paradise Lost.
Summary
This figure depicts Eve listening to the voice of Adam (previously described as Eve listening to Satan) in the Garden of Eden, a subject inspired by Book IV of John Milton's religious epic poem Paradise Lost (1667). Edward Hodges Baily's 1842 marble follows from his earlier illustration from Milton, Eve at the Fountain (plaster model from about 1818, marble 1821) which earned him full membership of the Royal Academy and was one of the most famous British sculptures at the time.

Having been absorbed in her own reflection, Eve turns to Adam to describe: 'As I bent down to look, just opposite/ A Shape within the watery gleam appeared,/ Bending to look on me. I started back, /It started back but/Pleased it returned as soon with answering looks/ Of sympathy and love.' Adam in turn tells her ‘What thou seest,/ What there thou seest, fair creature, is thyself’.

Baily’s Eve at the Fountain (a version of which, signed and dated 1822, is in the Bristol City Art Gallery; the plaster in the V&A collections, Museum no. A.3-2000) is inspired, in composition and neoclassical style, by a celebrated classical sculpture, the Nymph with a shell (Paris, Musée du Louvre). A second century CE Roman copy from a Greek original from the second century BCE, it was much admired from the 17th century onwards, and reproduced in marble and plaster. Eve Listening to the Voice largely reproduces Baily’s early composition, but for the position of the head and left hand. In the former version, Eve is looking down, absorbed by her own reflection. In the later version, she looks up and raises her hand, in gestures expressive of the act of listening and talking.

In a lecture delivered at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, the sculptor Henry Weekes commented that Baily, 'an earnest pupil of Flaxman, was a more finished modeller than his master, though with less feeling and sentiment, and less power in design. What he gained by the means I have alluded to, was knowledge, not genius, and it carried him a great way: the latter, even his great teacher could not impart to him, though he obtained under his tuition much that we may designate as purity of style and taste. You may think it strange in me if I say that, notwithstanding he produced one of the most beautiful examples of English ideal Sculpture as yet known to us - his Eve - he was wanting in genius!' This figure was also reproduced in Parian ware (a granular porcelain), and Baily also made busts taken from this model.

Edward Hodges Baily (1788-1867) was British sculptor and designer. As son of a ship’s carver he began his career as a modeller in wax. He spent seven years in John Flaxman’s studio, acknowledged as his favourite and most devoted pupil. He attended the Royal Academy Schools. He is the sculptor of the Nelson on Nelson's Column, of about half the sculpture for Marble Arch, some of the exterior work on Buckingham Palace, and a number of monuments in St Paul's and Westminster Abbey, just to name a few. The work that brought him fame was Eve at the Fountain first shown in 1818 at the Royal Academy.
Bibliographic references
  • List of Objects in the Art Division, South Kensington, Acquired During the Year 1875, Arranged According to the Dates of Acquisition. London: Printed by George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode for H.M.S.O., p. 34
  • Bilbey, Diane and Trusted Marjorie. British Sculpture 1470 to 2000. A Concise Catalogue of the Collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum. London, 2002, p. 188, cat. no. 266
  • Cf. [Auction catalogue] The Grittleton Marbles. Christies, 22 September 1966, lot. 9
  • Cf. European sculpture. London: Daniel Katz Ltd., 1996, no. 56
  • 'Eve Listening to the Voice. From the statue in marble, by E. H. Baily, R.A.',Art Journal., July 1850, p. 208.
Collection
Accession number
468-1875

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Record createdFebruary 26, 2003
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