Friday, October 11, 2024

Burden Bearers

Ferdinand Erfmann
Acrobats
1964
oil on canvas
Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht

Wiener Kunstkeramische Werkstätte
Boy with Crocodile
ca. 1910
glazed earthenware
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

Gari Melchers
Four Figures bearing a Burden
ca. 1900
drawing
(study for mural, Peace)
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh

Adolf von Hildebrand
Fisherman carrying a Net
1886
marble
Neue Pinakothek, Munich

Antoine-Louis Barye after Giambologna
Hercules carrying the Erymanthean Boar
ca. 1850
bronze statuette (partly gilt)
Morgan Library, New York

Pieter Xavery
Satyr
1671
terracotta statuette
High Museum of Art, Atlanta

Giovanni Pietro Possenti
Two Putti carrying a Third
ca. 1650
drawing
Yale University Art Gallery

Bernardino Cesari
Faun abducting Nymph
ca. 1616
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Monogrammist DS
Angel with Column of the Passion
ca. 1599
drawing
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Annibale Carracci
Study for Hercules Supporting the Globe
ca. 1595-97
drawing
Biblioteca Reale, Turin

Cornelis Cort
Antique Statue of Bacchus carrying the Young Dionysus
ca. 1574
engraving
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York

Anonymous Netherlandish Artist
The Paralytic healed by Christ
ca. 1560-90
oil on panel
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Anonymous Venetian Artist
Pan as Atlante
ca. 1550-80
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Paolo Farinati
Two Atlantes
ca. 1540-60
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Bartolomeo Montagna
Christ carrying the Cross
ca. 1515
oil on canvas
Kunsthaus, Zürich

Roman Empire
Bacchus carrying the young Dionysus,
accompanied by Satyrs

AD 200-220
marble
Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins

 from The Island of Statues

'Tis here the arrow fell: the breezes laughed
Around the feathery tip. Unto the shaft
This blossom is most near. Statue! Oh, thou
Whose beard a moonlight river is, whose brow
Is stone: old sleeper! this same afternoon
O'er much I've talked: I shall be silent soon,
If wrong my choice, as silent as thou art,
Oh! gracious Pan, take now thy servant's part.
He was our ancient god. If I speak low,
And not too clear, how will the new god know
But that I called on him?

– W.B. Yeats (1885)