Powers' bust of the ancient Greek sea nymph Clytie was the artist's attempt to create a bust of ideal female beauty, a concept popular during the middle of the nineteenth century. Clytie, the daughter of the god of the sea, Oceanus, was so enamored with the sun god Apollo that every day she watched his course across the sky. Apollo took pity on her and transformed her into a heliotrope, or sunflower. Clytie became, therefore, the symbol of unwavering love.
Powers was directly inspired by a classical Roman bust in the British Museum thought to represent Antonia, mother of Germanicus and the Emperor Claudius. Powers would have seen reproductions of this bust in engravings as well as marble and porcelain copies which were widely circulated at the time.
cxd
<P>Powers' bust of the ancient Greek sea nymph Clytie was the artist's attempt to create a bust of ideal female beauty, a concept popular during the middle of the nineteenth century. Clytie, the daughter of the god of the sea, Oceanus, was so enamored with the sun god Apollo that every day she watched his course across the sky. Apollo took pity on her and transformed her into a heliotrope, or sunflower. Clytie became, therefore, the symbol of unwavering love.</P><P>Powers was directly inspired by a classical Roman bust in the British Museum thought to represent Antonia, mother of Germanicus and the Emperor Claudius. Powers would have seen reproductions of this bust in engravings as well as marble and porcelain copies which were widely circulated at the time.</P>
Context
false