Enyo/Bellona by Jean-Léon Gérôme 1892

"Bellona, the Ancient Roman Goddess of war, proudly adorned the lobby of Toronto’s luxurious Four Seasons Hotel during the 1970s and 80s. The life-size bronze and ivory statue bedecked with precious gems welcomed visitors with open arms holding a large shield and dagger. This sculpture is now prominently exhibited on the second floor of the Art Gallery of Hamilton in the David Braley and Nancy Gordon Sculpture Atrium.

Designed by the 19th-century French painter and sculptor Jean-Léon Gérôme, the multi-media statue was ridiculed upon its unveiling at the 1893 Royal Academy Exhibition in London. Bellona was scoffed at by younger artists who promoted non-historical and increasingly abstract subjects drawn from modern life. The work was scorned in particular for the exotic and frightening face with its open mouth, pronounced jaw line, recessed eyes with emerald pupils and above all Bellona’s flamboyant gestures. Making her ever more shocking, the warrior Goddess is encircled by a giant king cobra with ribs spread and fangs out waiting to pounce. The cobra symbolizes Bellona’s ability to inflict torturous death upon her opponents.

Gérôme viewed the work as a success, fulfilling his intention to take decorative art to a new level. Following the artist’s death in 1904 the statue continued to be an object of ridicule by the emerging leaders of abstract art.

Visitors to the Four Seasons weren’t laughing though. They were, instead, quietly prying her apart, popping the gems out of their bronze casing—notably the rubies and blue crystal on her breastplate. Bellona had now become a subject of attraction for both guests and the broader public. Passersby, reportedly, visited the hotel just to get a piece of her.

Paintings and statues of the Goddess were popular in the post-Renaissance period with a range of works created by prominent artists. Gérôme’s sculpture is the most extravagant representation executed by any artist including his contemporary Auguste Rodin who sculpted both marble and bronze statues and busts of the Goddess.

Unlike Gérôme though, his bronze and marble sculptures were neither bedecked with gems nor ridiculed. Her captivating appearance and reputation among Torontonians as an unlocked vault of precious gems inspired one individual to behead the monumental Goddess. As the staff of the Four Seasons calmly assisted guests, an unidentified individual ran through the front door and tore the head from the bronze torso, snapping the small pin that held the head in place and breaking her left arm in the process!"

-taken from attheagh.wordpress link below



Enyo/Bellona by Jean-Léon Gérôme 1892




 

 


Source/Quote:

https://attheagh.wordpress.com/2015/09/03/bellona-beheaded-art-theft-and-the-rebirth-of-a-monument/

https://in.pinterest.com/pin/440015826074111982/

https://www.pinterest.com/pin/416160821819341024/  

https://twitter.com/theagh/status/489077304669503488

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