This impressive bronze sculpture represents the
death of Laocoon and his sons. It is an
Enlightenment reworking of an ancient sculpture
dating to the 1st century BC, and which classes as
one of the supreme masterworks of the ancient
world. The sculpture is notable for its clever
juxtaposition of the powerful and mature
musculature of the lead figure, compared with the
slimmer, athletic figures of his sons. The sinuous
and powerful forms of the snakes move effortlessly
around the struggling bodies and perfectly frame
them.
Laocoon was Poseidon’s priest, whose most famous
utterance is the classic: Equo ne credite, Teucri /
Quidquid id est, timeo Danaos et dona ferentes
(Trojans, do not trust this horse/ whatever it may be
the Greeks are to be feared, even when they come
bearing gifts). He knew there was something
suspicious about the vast wooden horse that had
been delivered to the gates of Troy – and, indeed, it
contained numerous Greek soldiers who planned to
take the city by night once it was taken inside the
gates.
Unfortunately, Laocoon underlined his objections by
throwing his spear at the horse, and at this moment
two serpents, sent by Minerva, surfaced from the sea
and strangled Laocoon and his two sons Antiphantes
and Thymbraeus. The lines from Virgil’s Aeneid
describe the scene:
With both his hands he labors at the knots
His holy fillets the blue venom blots
His roaring fills the flitting air around.
Thus, when an ox receives a glancing wound
He breaks his bands, the fatal altar flies
And with loud bellowings breaks the yielding skies.
The Trojans mistakenly believed that this was
punishment for striking the horse, wheeled it into
the city and thus sealed their fate. In fact, Laocoon
was being punished by Minerva for having sex
within sight of a holy icon, or perhaps for raising
sons. In any case, this unfortunate coincidence led
to the fall of Troy, and the agonised demise of these
three figures in the coils of deadly serpents has been
seen as an allegory for the event.
The complex scenario was famously executed in
marble by Agesander, Polydorus and Athenodoros.
This original, which currently sits in the Vatican, was
the inspiration for a host of enlightenment sculptors
who, inspired by finds brought back from the grand
tours of the 18th century, wrought copies and
related works in traditional materials. Notable
exponents include Bandinelli and Lord Leighton.
This Italian bronze sculpture of Lacoon dates to the
late 18th/ early 19th Century
The original marble Lacoon is arguably the most
renowned sculpture ever created (Michelangelo
1506)
The Lacoon marble sculpture after which this
remarkable bronze was modeled unquestionably
influenced the lives and works of countless artists,
authors, Popes, kings and emperors since it was first
discovered in the early 16th century. Incredibly
important to the history of art, this extraordinary
work and its handful of replicas are prominently
displayed in the most prestigious museums around
the world, from the Vatican to the J. Paul Jetty.
Beautifully crafted, the present bronze displays all of
the dynamic artistry and poignant expression of
which the original is so celebrated.
A dynamic and impressive piece of art.