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entry
August
2009
At the time, the sculptures provided
decorative furnishing for different Farnese family residences in Rome
and Parma. Then, Elizabeth Farnese (1692-1766), the
Queen Consort of Spain (wife of Philip V), who owned the collection by
inheritance, passed it on to her son, Charles, who then became the
first king of the new Bourbon dynasty of
Naples in 1735. Museum literature says that the collection passed to
Naples "at the wish of Ferdinand IV,"
Charles' son. I will shoulder Atlas' burden for one year (see photo in
section below) if that statement is true! Ferdinand IV was a notorious
ignoramus and vulgarian who wouldn't have known a statue if one had
fallen on him (and it's too bad one didn't!). It is certainly the case,
on the other hand, that his brilliant and ambitious consort, Caroline, was behind the transfer of her
father-in-law's collection from Rome and Parma to Naples. That would be
in the late 1700s, when the collection indeed was incorporated into a
nascent museum at the northwest corner of the
old city, premises that had originally housed a cavalry barracks and
then the University of Naples and now the National Archaeological
Museum of Naples. Most of the items in the collection are
Roman copies of Greek originals. (Some are not. See this entry on Artemis.) Even before their
transfer to Naples,
many of these sculptures had already
been substantially repaired by artists working in the Farnese family
circle; after the move, some of them were subjected to further
restoration and modification by
Carlo Albacini
(1777-1858). He modified, in accordance with the tastes
of the new
Neoclassical style, repairs that had been done in the past. Once they
reached their destination, some of the sculptures were restored yet
again by artists active in Naples. The old Farnese collection, once
spread out in many residences, is united in Naples for the first time.
The display, in various rooms on the ground floor of the museum, is
spectacular.
"Some historians had speculated that the sculptor might have consulted the work of Ptolemy, who lived about 250 years after Hipparchus, or Aratus, who described the constellations in a poem about a century before Hipparchus. Curiously, no one appears to have suggested Hipparchus' catalog as the reference source." That is incorrect. The original idea was presented much earlier by Georg Thiele, a German scholar. He, indeed, suggested Hipparchus' catalog as the reference source. (In Antike Himmelsbilder [Ancient Constellations] by Georg Thiele, pub. Weidmann, Berlin, 1898.) Hipparchus (c. 190 BC- c. 120 BC) is considered to be almost the founder of modern, accurate Western astronomy; he developed spherical trigonometry, for example, and for his star catalog, completed in 129 B.C., devised a coordinate system to plot each star's location and a scale to rank the brightness. He is also believed to be the one who discovered "precession," the exceedingly slow change in the position of astronomical bodies as seen from the earth due to the fact the earth, as it rotates on its axis, also wobbles like a top slowing down. The axis points north, yes, but slowly traces a gigantic cone in the sky as the earth "wobbles", completing one cycle every 26,000 years. That is why "north" and the "north star" shift over time and why the seasonal "reversals" of the sun known as the "equinoxes" shift ever so slightly over the centuries. As most know, the current north star is Polaris, the brightest star in the constellation Ursa Minor, also known as The Little Dipper. (Polaris is only about one degree off of the true north celestial pole, which is the axis of the earth extended into space.) Over the millennia, other stars have been "north" and, indeed, will be again some day. In the year 3,000 BC, the faint star Thuban in the constellation Draco had the honor, and if you can wait until the year 3000 AD, the honor of informing us which way is up will have passed to Gamma Cephei, also known by its Arabic name, Alrai, meaning "shepherd." The recent resurrection of the idea that the Farnese globe is indebted to Hipparchus has attracted strong criticism. The globe contains no actual stars, just pictures of constellations, say critics, and the whole statue, in any event, was copied by a sculptor, not an astronomer; it is, at best, ambiguous. What's more, they say, at least some of the constellations, in fact, do not correspond to the night sky at the time of Hipparchus. Me, I don't know. I'll just sit here and quietly wait for the coming of the shepherd. He'll know. to encyclopedia index to science portal to art portal |