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Cast of the Dancing Faun; Medici Faun; Faun with clappers; Original in Uffizi, Florence

Unknown maker, after unidentified Roman sculptorpossibly 1781

Royal Academy of Arts

Royal Academy of Arts
London, United Kingdom

A faun makes music by simultaneously playing the ‘crotala’ (similar to cymbals) in his hands and the ‘scabellum’ or ‘croupezion’ (a clapper worn like a sandal) under his right foot. The head and arms were later additions to the sculpture. While the restoration work is no longer believed to have been carried out by Michelangelo (as was once supposed), it may well date from the 16th century.

This is a plaster cast of the Dancing Faun, a marble sculpture first recorded in 1665 in the collection of the Grand Duke of Tuscany in Florence (it’s likely it had long been owned by the house of Medici, an Italian banking family and political dynasty). By 1688 the sculpture was in the Tribuna of the Uffizi museum. Soon after its emergence from obscurity in the 17th century the Dancing Faun gained a reputation as one of the finest ancient sculptures in existence. Two other versions were excavated in Rome in the 1630s, and casts were made of the Uffizi faun from the 1680s onwards. In September 1800 the sculpture was sent to Palermo along with other treasures to avoid plunder by the French army, but it was returned to the Tribuna in 1803.

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  • Title: Cast of the Dancing Faun; Medici Faun; Faun with clappers; Original in Uffizi, Florence
  • Creator: Unknown maker, after unidentified Roman sculptor
  • Date Created: possibly 1781
  • Type: Sculpture cast
  • Medium: Plaster cast
  • Royal Academy Picture Library number: PL000219
  • Physical dimensions: Height: 151 cm
Royal Academy of Arts

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