Boston Public LibraryPaintings and Fine Arts Collection at the Boston Public Library / American Artists / Mural Cycles at the Central Library in Copley Square
Pagan Gods: Astarte
Item Information
- Title:
- Pagan Gods: Astarte
- Title (uniform):
-
Sargent, John Singer, 1856-1925. Triumph of religion
- Description:
-
Visible in this eastern portion of the Pagan Gods arch is Astarte, the goddess of sensuality enrobed in swaths of light blue and adorned with jewels rendered in glass and metal relief. Astarte stands upon a thin crescent moon. Above her head, the pincers of a scarab beetle hold an orange orb, behind which lies the inverted face of the goddess Neith. The mother of the Universe, Neith's body forms the length of the ceiling, with her hands touching the eastern horizon, her zodiac neck plate crowning the arch, and her torso and legs extending downward to the west side of the vault.
- Artist:
- Sargent, John Singer, 1856-1925
- Photographer:
- Lanzel, Sheryl
- Sponsor:
- Boston Public Library
- Date:
-
[ca. 1890–1895]
- Format:
-
Paintings
- Genre:
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Murals
- Location:
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Boston Public Library
Sargent Gallery - Collection (local):
-
Mural Cycles at the Central Library in Copley Square
- Series:
- Sargent Gallery Murals: Triumph of Religion by John Singer Sargent
- Subjects:
-
Religion
Gods
Astarte (Phoenician deity)
- Extent:
- 1 painting : mural, oil on canvas
- Permalink:
- https://ark.digitalcommonwealth.org/ark:/50959/sq87dv89p
- Terms of Use:
-
Copyright (c) Sheryl Lanzel
All rights reserved.
- Notes:
-
Title from information in: Wick, Peter A. "A handbook to the art and architecture of the Boston Public Library" and Sargent, John Singer, "A sequence of mural decoration executed between 1895 and 1916.".
Abstract from information in: Sargent, John Singer, "A sequence of mural decoration executed between 1895 and 1916." and Promey, Sally M., "John Singer Sargent's Triumph of Religion at the Boston Public Library."
- Notes (date):
-
A contract dated January 18, 1893 officially commissioned John Singer Sargent to undertake work on the Boston Public Library Murals. Canvases were completed in Sargent's studios in Morgan Hall, England and London, England and shipped over to Boston and adhered to the library walls in four installations occurring in 1895, 1903, 1916, and 1919.
- Notes (object):
-
The artist used "raised relief" elements - including wood, Lincrusta-Walton, metal, papier-mâché, glass, and plaster to help emboss and illuminate the figures in natural light. Full "Pagan Gods" vault measures approximately 431 x 102 inches.
- Notes (historical):
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John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) was born in Florence, Italy to an American family. He was educated at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and spent most of his life living and working in England. The artist maintained close ties to Boston and painted the Boston Public Library murals concurrently with murals at the nearby Museum of Fine Arts. Known for his aptitude as a portrait painter, Sargent was commissioned to capture many famous faces of his day. The library murals - arguably his most ambitious works - represented an opportunity to solidify his reputation as a master. He was not a highly religious man, but remained fascinated by religious imagery and iconography. "Triumph of Religion" represented an opportunity for the mid-career artist to take on a truly ambitious theme and celebrate his study of religious visual history. His mural cycle was left incomplete, perhaps slowed by the artist's personal loss with the death of his niece in World War I, as well as by criticism received from members of the public who found his representations offensive.
- Accession #:
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Pagan-Gods-2