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A bronze sculpture of Mars.  His head is turned to his right, his right hand reaches to his lef…
Back view of a bronze sculpture of Mars.  His head is turned to his right, his right hand reach…
#176: By Xavier F. Salomon, Chief Curator Transcript

The sculptor Tiziano Aspetti may have cast this elegant male nude for someone in the circle of the Grimani family in Venice, around 1590. The figure represents Mars, the god of war, in a most unwarlike pose. Instead of wearing his armor, he is standing on it. With his right hand, he appears to be drawing his sword, but his gaze is directed off to the side. We know what he is looking at because this figure was originally matched with another work: an equally graceful figure of Venus, which is now at the Accademia Carrara in Bergamo, Italy.

The statuettes were conceived as a pair. Standing side by side, Venus, goddess of love, would have disarmed the god of war with her beauty. Aspetti modeled the small figure of Mars as if caught in motion, with Mars’s right arm inviting the viewer to experience the figure in the round. The base was cast integrally with the figure, lending an air of monumentality to the small-scale statuette.

Mars

 (Italian, ca. 1559–1606)
Dateca. 1590
MediumBronze
DimensionsH.: 22 11/16 in. (57.6 cm)
Credit LineHenry Clay Frick Bequest
Accession number1916.2.56
Commentary

While the Venetian sculptors Alessandro Vittoria and Girolamo Campagna played influential roles in forming Aspetti's style, long before he moved to Tuscany he seems to have been strongly attracted by Florentine sculpture, and especially by Giovanni Bologna. The spiraling pose of his Mars reflects contemporary Florentine taste for elegant, convoluted patterns, wherein the head turns on the torso, the arms swing counter to the torso, and the legs often make swaying, unstable contact with the ground. The sense of coiled movement implied by the god's pose is further propelled by his action as he reaches back to draw his sword while gazing forward over his right shoulder toward an unseen foe. Aspetti's modeling of the bronze contributes to the liveliness of the sculpture. Light seems to flicker up over the surface as the form swells and diminishes like a flame. One is strongly reminded of paintings by his Venetian contemporary Tintoretto.

Other versions of this Mars exist, some paired with Venus and Cupid and some mounted as andirons.

Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996.

Collection History

J. Pierpont Morgan, London and New York. Duveen. Frick, 1916.

Source: Sculpture in The Frick Collection: Italian. Volume III. New York: The Frick Collection, 1970.

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