Eros with a Dolphin
Eros with a Dolphin
Published 2019-05-24T15:15:00+00:00
This sculpture, from the Farnese Collection, depicts Eros (Cupid) riding a dolphin. The work was created in the 2nd Century AD adn was used as an ornamental motif on a fountain. The group represents Eros as a winged child, positioned upside down as he rides a dolphin from whose mouth would have spouted water. The impressively complicated composition of the work is highlighted by the spiralling twist of the dolphin's tail around the child's body, oh which only the legs in the highest part remain free.
The motif of Eros riding a dolphin is known in Greek art from the middle of the sixth century BC, especially in ceramics or decorative arts. In ancient and later works where this motif was most common, the image is believed to represent the soul's journey (see ancient Roman sarcophagi), originally associated with Dionysian religion. A mosaic from late Roman Britain shows a procession emerging from the mouth of the sea god Neptune, first dolphins and then sea birds, ascending to Cupid. One interpretation of this allegory is that Neptune represents the soul's origin in the matter from which life was fashioned, with Cupid triumphing as the soul's desired destiny
Date published | 24/05/2019 |
Complexity | Medium |
Title | Eros with a Dolphin |
Date | 190 AD - 199 AD |
Dimension | Height: 183 cm |
Accession | 6375 |
Period | Roman |
Medium | Marble |
Credit | From the Farnese Collection |
Record | http://www.culturaitalia.it/opencms/viewItem.jsp?language=it&id=oai%3Aculturaitalia.it%3Amuseiditalia-work_99026 |
Artist | Unknown artist |
Place | Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli |