Skip to content

African Venus

Creator Name

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier

Cultural Context

--

Date

1852

About the work

Walters Art Museum Object Description

This bronze is believed to be modeled on the combined appearances of several women; Cordier later recorded that he composed his busts in this way. First exhibited with the title “Black Woman from the Colonies,” the sculpture was renamed “African Venus” in 1857 by the French critic Théophile Gautier. Intending to ennoble the subject through a Eurocentric reference to the ancient Roman goddess of love, Gautier’s retitling further erased the specificities of the Black woman’s composite identity.Regarded in the 19th century as powerful expressions of nobility and dignity, this sculpture and its companion piece "Saïd Abdullah of the Mayac, Kingdom of Darfur (Seïd Enkess)" or "Black Man from Timbuktu" (WAM 54.2664) proved to be highly popular: casts were acquired by ...

Work details

"--" = no data available
Curationist Logo= Curationist added metadata(Learn more)

Title

African Venus

Creator

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier, male

Worktype

Metal; sculpture (visual works)

Cultural Context

--

Material

bronze and gold

Dimensions

H: 15 9/16 x W: 8 in. (39.5 x 20.3 cm); H with base: 19 1/2 × W: 8 1/4 × D: 6 11/16 in. (49.5 × 21 × 17 cm)

Technique

--

Language

--

Date

1852

Provenance

Walters Art Museum, 1991, by purchase.; Shepherd Gallery, New York; Walters Art Museum, 1991, by purchase.

Style Period

--

Rights

Curationist Logo
CC0; GNU Free Documentation License

Inscription

--

Location

--

Subject

--

Topic

--

All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Charles-Henri-Joseph Cordier, African Venus, 1852, Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.

Help us improve this content!

Let our archivists know if you have something to add.

Save this work.

Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.
masonry card