Important Pair of Deer Signed Hunt (1974/1975) Copies of Paul Getty's Bronzes Hunt is a pseudonym used for the bronzes cast between 1974 and 1975. The foundry at that time worked for two years on reproducing the bronzes from the Villa of the Papyri in Herculaneum. The bronzes were commissioned by Paul Getty and were signed by Chiurazzi. They also made other copies... secretly, and to avoid problems with Getty, they signed them Hunt. Therefore, these signed Hunt ones were cast between 1974 and 1975. All the others, whatever their signature, were cast between 1998 and 2011, the year the foundry closed. Between 1974 and 1975, the foundry was engaged in reproducing all the bronzes discovered at the Villa of the Papyri in Herculaneum for oil magnate Jean Paul Getty, who intended to decorate his Malibu villa-museum with the Chiurazzi bronzes. The story of Goering's theft during World War II concerns the original pair, which dates back to the second or first century BC. Goering gave them to Hitler, see the photo... Then the Americans, along with a couple of Frenchmen, managed to recover them. This pair of bronze Fawns was copied in 1900 by a Neapolitan foundry and produced for Paul Getty; indeed, they can be seen in the famous Malibu villa-museum in California. The pair is being sold as a whole, not individually. Lost-wax bronze casting from the 20th century. Both are signed HUNT. The pair housed at the MAN National Museum in Naples originates from Herculaneum, specifically from the famous "Villa of the Papyri." The two fawns are not identical; in particular, one is looking to the right and one to the left; they are the classic "versante" pair. These two stunning artifacts are part of "Roman statuary." The animals are stylized, have a particularly elegant bearing, and are graceful. They were probably produced in the first century AD, shortly before the eruption of Vesuvius. During World War II, they were stolen by the Germans, and thanks to the work of Frederick Hartt and the Monuments Men organization in Italy (1944-1945), most of the Nazi-looted works were returned to their original location. Frederick Hartt in Italy devastated by the Second World War. Hartt, an American art historian who, after the war, defended his doctoral thesis on Giulio Romano in New York, served as a United States Army officer in the Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives Program (MFAA) from 1942 to 1946, receiving the Bronze Star for Merit for this role. He then organized the "Monuments Men" organization in Italy, which enabled the cataloging of all artistic and monumental assets, their state of conservation and the effects of wartime destruction, the relocation of what could be relocated for protection purposes, and the recovery of works stolen by the fleeing Nazis. Among these works is the Pair of Deer from Herculaneum. Height 95 cm Width 30 cm Length 80 cm Weight 25 each. TTL 50 kg Artist / Designer / Architect Ancient Rome, 1st or 2nd century BC BC Base of the statue 55.5 x 18.5 x 7 cm (21.5 x 7.5 x 2.7 in) Finish Patinated bronze Material Lost-wax bronze Museum where the original is displayed MAN Naples Bibliography: • Quintavalle A. C., p. 568, 2003 Signature: HUNT
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