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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN LITERATURE AND ART 701<br />

CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN AMERICAN ART<br />

During the first century of the American Republic, mythological subjects were<br />

often copied by schoolgirls from engravings (the illustrations for Pope's translation<br />

of the Iliad were a favorite source) or were imaginatively treated by women<br />

in their spare time at home (see pages 60, 465, and 486). Artists who studied in<br />

Europe copied paintings of classical subjects and exhibited them when they returned.<br />

The earliest such exhibition, given in Boston in 1730 by John Smibert<br />

(1688-1751), aroused great public interest. Ten years earlier, a Swedish immigrant,<br />

Gustavus Hesselius (1682-1755), painted the earliest known American<br />

mythological works, Bacchus and Ariadne (now in Detroit) and Bacchanal (now in<br />

Philadelphia).<br />

While the leading American painters (such as Copley, West, Allston, and<br />

Vanderlyn) sometimes painted mythological subjects, American taste soon<br />

turned to historical themes and to the dramatic potential of the American landscape.<br />

One of the best American mythological paintings is John Vanderlyn's Ariadne,<br />

painted in 1811 and now in Philadelphia (see Color Plate 16). It depicts the<br />

scene described in Ovid's Heroides 10. 7-10, as Ariadne wakes to find herself deserted.<br />

When it was first exhibited it aroused interest and controversy. But by<br />

Vanderlyn's time it was already clear that American painters would find material<br />

in sources other than classical mythology.<br />

In sculpture, however, the classical influence continued to be strong. Horatio<br />

Greenough (1805-1852) used Phei<strong>dia</strong>s' statue of Zeus at Olympia as the basis<br />

for his seated statue (1832-1839) of George Washington, now in the National<br />

Museum of American History but planned originally for the Rotunda of the<br />

Capitol. On the sides of Washington's throne are mythological reliefs, on one<br />

side Apollo as the sun-god rising into the sky with his chariot and on the other<br />

the infants Heracles and Iphicles with the serpents sent by Hera. Greenough<br />

wanted Heracles to be an allegory of North America, which "struggles successfully<br />

with the obstacles and dangers of an incipient political existence."<br />

A group of expatriate American artists living in Rome is described in<br />

Hawthorne's The Marble Faun (1859). Among these was Harriet Hosmer (1820-<br />

1908), whose busts of Medusa (illustrated on p. 511), and Daphne (both completed<br />

in 1854) were meant to express her views on celibacy and beauty. Her Oenone was<br />

based on Tennyson's poem Oenone rather than directly on Ovid's Heroides.<br />

CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY SINCE 1900<br />

<strong>Classical</strong> mythology has continued to be a vigorous source of inspiration for<br />

artists since 1900. In France and Spain especially, Georges Braque (1882-1963)<br />

and Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) returned frequently to classical themes. Perhaps

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