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Barthélemy Prieur - Woman Bathing - Walters 54718 - Profile

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Barthélemy Prieur - Woman Bathing - Walters 54718 - Profile

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Summary

In antiquity, sculptors often depicted Venus bathing or doing her hair. During the Renaissance, a bathing woman (not always Venus) was again a popular subject for small bronzes. It offered the male collector the voyeuristic pleasure of gazing at an unclothed woman who is unaware of being observed.
Giambologna created famous small bronzes of this type with gracefully elongated bodies. Barthelemy Prieur, the sophisticated "Sculptor to the King" to Henry IV of France, was influenced by them but created statuettes in a more intimate format, depicting different moments of a woman's personal toilette in naturalistic poses. Conceived for the private enjoyment of the collector, they invite one's touch with their smooth curving backs. Groupings of these figures in 17th-century inventories suggest they were collected in "sets."

date_range

Date

1600 - 1699
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Source

Walters Art Museum
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http://purl.org/thewalters/rights/standard

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