Lot 210
C. Ponti image of Piraeus Lion in Venice 1850s-60s

Estimate: $150 - $250

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About this Lot
Description

Carlo PONTI (1823-1893, photographer).

[Venice, Italy: The Piraeus Lion (Leone del Pireo), one of four lion statues on display at the Venetian Arsenal: a symbol of Venice's patron saint, Saint Mark] Venice: Ponti, Riva dei Schiavoni, [1850s-1860s]. Lightly albumenized photograph (10 ½ x 8 1/2in; 267 x 211mm), on original thin card mount (17 ½ x 12in; 444 x 306mm), the mount with the photographer’s blindstamp. (Some light soiling to mount).

A tonally-strong example of this striking image. The 2,200 year-old Piraeues Lion “was originally located in Piraeus, the harbour of Athens. It was looted by Venetian naval commander Francesco Morosini in 1687 as plunder taken in the Great Turkish War against the Ottoman Empire, …The lion was originally sculpted in about 360 BC, and became a famous landmark in Piraeus, Athens, having stood there since the 1st or 2nd century AD. Its prominence was such that the port eventually became referred to in Italian as Porto Leone ("Lion Port") as the port's original name ceased to be used. It is depicted in a sitting pose, with a hollow throat and the mark of a pipe (now lost) running down its back; this suggests that it was at some point used as a fountain This is consistent with the description of the statue from the 1670s, which said that water flowed from the lion's mouth into a cistern at its feet.

The statue, which is made of white marble and stands some 3 m (9 ft.) high, is particularly noteworthy for having been in, the second half of the 11th century, inscribed by Scandinavians who carved two lengthy runic inscriptions into the shoulders and flanks of the lion. …. The Swedes who carved the runes on the lion were almost certainly Varangians, mercenaries in the service of the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Emperor” (wikipedia).


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