The Guilford Puteal is a
Pentelic
Mount Pentelicus or Pentelikon (, or ) is a mountain in Attica, Greece, situated northeast of Athens and southwest of Marathon. Its highest point is the peak ''Pyrgari'', with an elevation of 1,109 m. The mountain is covered in large part w ...
marble Ancient Roman sculpture. Its name derives from its use as a
puteal or
wellhead, and one of its previous owners,
Frederick North, second
Earl of Guilford. Its discovery in Corinth gives rise to an alternative modern name, the ''Corinth Puteal''.
Origin
The ''puteal''—wellhead is a cylindrical drum 50 cm by 106 cm and dates to circa 30-10 BC. It is part of a commemorative memorial in the city of ancient
Corinth, which at that time had recently been refounded by Augustus's adoptive father
Julius Caesar
Gaius Julius Caesar (; ; 12 July 100 BC – 15 March 44 BC), was a Roman general and statesman. A member of the First Triumvirate, Caesar led the Roman armies in the Gallic Wars before defeating his political rival Pompey in a civil war, and ...
, that celebrated
Augustus's victory at the
battle of Actium. Work is ongoing to locate the likely original site of the monument from which it came, perhaps even with part of its missing moulding restored.
Iconography
The wellhead is decorated in
bas-relief, with ten figures of deities and heroes. At the front two small processions meet: on the left is
Apollo with his lyre (Augustus's patron deity) who leads
Artemis (trailing her stag) and another female figure, probably their mother
Leto. Behind Leto, from left to right, is
Hermes/
Mercury
Mercury commonly refers to:
* Mercury (planet), the nearest planet to the Sun
* Mercury (element), a metallic chemical element with the symbol Hg
* Mercury (mythology), a Roman god
Mercury or The Mercury may also refer to:
Companies
* Merc ...
(in winged sandals) leading three dancing women or
nymphs. On the right is
Athena/
Minerva (another patron of Augustus, her arm extended to hold her helmet) leading
Herakles/
Hercules (with his club on his shoulder and a quiver beneath his arm, patron of Augustus's defeated enemy
Mark Antony) and a veiled woman (
Hera
In ancient Greek religion, Hera (; grc-gre, Ἥρα, Hḗrā; grc, Ἥρη, Hḗrē, label=none in Ionic and Homeric Greek) is the goddess of marriage, women and family, and the protector of women during childbirth. In Greek mythology, she ...
,
Aphrodite or Heracles's bride
Hebe). The figures were spaced wide apart, and were designed in the
Neo Attic
Neo-Attic or Atticizing is a sculptural style, beginning in Hellenistic sculpture and vase-painting of the 2nd century BC and climaxing in Roman art of the 2nd century AD, copying, adapting or closely following the style shown in reliefs and stat ...
style, a Roman version of the archaic sixth century BC Greek style.
Similar examples
Similar examples include:
# A relief in the collection of the
Villa Albani in Rome, catalogued in the 18th century by
Winckelmann Winckelmann may refer to:
* George Winckelmann (1884–1962), a Finnish lawyer and a diplomat
* Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–1768), a German art historian and archaeologist
* Johann Just Winckelmann
Johann Just Winckelmann (19 August 1620 ...
# A semi-circular puteal from
Nicopolis, now on show at the Archaeological Museum at
Ioannina
Ioannina ( el, Ιωάννινα ' ), often called Yannena ( ' ) within Greece, is the capital and largest city of the Ioannina regional unit and of Epirus, an administrative region in north-western Greece. According to the 2011 census, the c ...
;
# Another, smashed into tiny fragments, has similar archaising figures of deities.
# A fragmentary base from
Ephesus
Ephesus (; grc-gre, Ἔφεσος, Éphesos; tr, Efes; may ultimately derive from hit, 𒀀𒉺𒊭, Apaša) was a city in ancient Greece on the coast of Ionia, southwest of present-day Selçuk in İzmir Province, Turkey. It was built in t ...
in western Turkey, itself recycled for later use and now in the collections of the
Kunsthistorisches Museum
The Kunsthistorisches Museum ( "Museum of Art History", often referred to as the "Museum of Fine Arts") is an art museum in Vienna, Austria. Housed in its festive palatial building on the Vienna Ring Road, it is crowned with an octagonal do ...
, Vienna. The Ephesus puteal is decorated with some similar figures, but also others that do not appear on the Corinth Guilford Puteal; it also has a Greek inscription honouring the children of the recently deceased
Agrippa Agrippa may refer to:
People Antiquity
* Agrippa (mythology), semi-mythological king of Alba Longa
* Agrippa (astronomer), Greek astronomer from the late 1st century
* Agrippa the Skeptic, Skeptic philosopher at the end of the 1st century
* Agr ...
, who had charge of
Octavian's fleet at Actium.
History to the 19th century
It was used as a well-head after antiquity, either by a 19th-century Turkish owner or possibly earlier. This Turk displayed it the right way up, endangering the remains of the figures through friction of the well-rope against the marble. Its next owner was Notara, a cultured Greek official with a fine library who was a member of a distinguished family who could trace their descent back to the Byzantine
Palaeologi; Notara also used it in his garden as a wellhead but inverted it in an attempt to save it from further damage. By the time it passed to him its upper moulding, much of the bead-and-reel decoration of its lower moulding, and (most likely from an act of vandalism of unknown date, perhaps related to
iconoclasm) the heads of the figures moving in two processions around the drum had all already been lost.
In the earliest years of the nineteenth century Notara presided over a guest-house for western travellers to Corinth, by which circumstances the Guilford Puteal became known to western Europeans. While there it was seen by
Edward Dodwell
Edward Dodwell (30 November 176713 May 1832) was an Irish painter, traveller and a writer on archaeology.
Biography
Dodwell was born in Ireland and belonged to the same family as Henry Dodwell, the theologian. He was educated at Trinity C ...
in 1805 and drawn by his artist
Simone Pomardi, and was described by Dodwell in his account of his travels in Greece. It was seen by Colonel
William Leake
William Leake, father (died 1633) and son (died 1681), were London publishers and booksellers of the late sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries. They were responsible for a range of texts in English Renaissance drama and poetry, including work ...
in 1806. Dodwell perceptively recognised its close links with a relief in the collection of the
Villa Albani in Rome, catalogued in the eighteenth century by
Winckelmann Winckelmann may refer to:
* George Winckelmann (1884–1962), a Finnish lawyer and a diplomat
* Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–1768), a German art historian and archaeologist
* Johann Just Winckelmann
Johann Just Winckelmann (19 August 1620 ...
.
Otto Magnus von Stackelberg also drew casts of it, which had been taken to Athens.
It was then acquired by
Frederick North (later
Earl of Guilford) in 1810 at Corinth. It was among the sixty crates of marble sculpture he shipped from Greece in 1813. These were for display at his London house in Westminster, which he never inhabited but which contained his library and collections;
[Michaelis.] it was acquired with its contents on his death in 1827 by
Thomas Wentworth Beaumont
Thomas Wentworth Beaumont (5 November 1792 – 20 December 1848) of Bretton Hall, Wakefield in Yorkshire, and of Bywell Hall in Northumberland, was a British politician and soldier. In 1831, at the time he inherited his mother's estate, he was t ...
, an MP and member of a Yorkshire family. It was he who moved it to
Bretton Hall Bretton Hall may refer to:
*Bretton Hall, Flintshire, former fortified manor house on the England/Wales border
*Bretton Hall, West Yorkshire, country house in West Yorkshire, England
*Bretton Hall College
Bretton Hall College of Education was a h ...
for display, possibly in the stables built in 1830 by
George Basevi, better known as the architect of the
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
Loss and rediscovery
When the German scholar
Adolf Michaelis came to compile his great work, ''Ancient Marbles in Great Britain'' in the 1860s, the Guilford Puteal's location had already been lost to academia, and so he issued a rallying-cry in an article in the ''Journal of Hellenic Studies'' (vol. 5, 1884). A century later, its whereabouts still remained unknown and the object only known through drawings and reproductions of casts.
Meanwhile, it passed with
Bretton Hall Bretton Hall may refer to:
*Bretton Hall, Flintshire, former fortified manor house on the England/Wales border
*Bretton Hall, West Yorkshire, country house in West Yorkshire, England
*Bretton Hall College
Bretton Hall College of Education was a h ...
to
West Riding County Council (in 1947, becoming a teacher training college) and then (in 2000) to
Leeds University. In 1992 Peter Brears, curator of Leeds City Museum, and Bretton Hall fine art professor David Hill, sent a letter to the
British Museum's Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities, rightly surmising that a couple of sculptures in the Hall's gardens were ancient and of interest. One was the Puteal, then in use as a planter. By 1995, a keeper of the British Museum was then able to match figures from Pomardi and von Stackelberg's drawings to Brears's slides of the sculptures. This positive identification led to the sculpture's being moved and conserved using the British Museum's and
Henry Moore Foundation expertise, but it was not exhibited at this time, despite plans to do so.
On the College's absorption into Leeds University, the
HEFCE
The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) was a non-departmental public body in the United Kingdom, which was responsible for the distribution of funding for higher education to universities and further education colleges in Engla ...
instructed the University to put the Puteal and an altar from the same collection on the art market.
By 2002
Christie's
Christie's is a British auction house founded in 1766 by James Christie (auctioneer), James Christie. Its main premises are on King Street, St James's in London, at Rockefeller Center in New York City and at Alexandra House in Hong Kong. It is ...
had valued them and an overseas sale had been negotiated. However, at the same time the
Nicopolis examples were found and came to the attention of the same BM keeper. This discovery, giving it a date and context for the first time, allowed the Department of Culture, Media and Sport to stop export of the Guilford Puteal while the British Museum raised the necessary funds to acquire it. It was eventually bought for £294,009 (including an £108,000
Art Fund
Art Fund (formerly the National Art Collections Fund) is an independent membership-based British charity, which raises funds to aid the acquisition of artworks for the nation. It gives grants and acts as a channel for many gifts and bequests, as ...
grant and other money from the
Heritage Lottery Fund, the British Museum Friends and the Caryatids of the Greek and Roman Department) - this would have been higher had it gone onto the open market and through the usual sales processes, or if the Museum had not been able to respond as rapidly as it could due to the Nicopolis discovery.
As part of the University-College merger agreement with HEFCE, 80% of the proceeds went to the HEFCE and 20% to the University to offset the significant investment both the University and College had made to the pieces' upkeep.
At the British Museum the Guilford Puteal was at first displayed as a triumphant new acquisition in the Round Reading Room in the
Queen Elizabeth II Great Court
The Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, commonly referred to simply as the Great Court, is the covered central quadrangle of the British Museum in London. It was redeveloped during the late 1990s to a design by Foster and Partners, from a 1970 ...
, but is now on display in the limited-opening Room 83 in the basement.
Notes
{{reflist
External links
Art Fund* "Transactions of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies. - The Session of 1883", in ''The Journal of Hellenic Studies'', Vol. 4, 1883 (1883), pp. xxxvii-lii
* C. Vermeule, D. von Bothmer, "Notes on a New Edition of Michaelis: Ancient Marbles in Great Britain Part Two", ''American Journal of Archaeology'', Vol. 60, No. 4 (October 1956), pp. 321–350
Augustan sculptures
Ancient Greek and Roman sculptures in the British Museum
Archaeological discoveries in Greece