Tuesday, July 26, 2005

HEAD OF HYPNOS (Hypnos in the British Museum) + text



THE LAWRENCE OF ARABIA FACTFILE
T. E. Lawrence
Centenary Exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London, 1988-9
click on an image to move forward through the exhibition, or use the links at the foot of the page


39. HEAD OF HYPNOS
Replica of Greco-Roman sculpture
(4th century BC)
Lawrence returned to England form his 1909 walking tour in Syria on board the RMS Ottoway. He was by this time keenly interested in classical and medieval sculpture, and when the ship called in at Naples he took the opportunity to see the bronze collection in the National Museum. Afterwards he visited a local foundry which produced replicas. Most were too expensive, but he managed to buy a slightly imperfect cast of Hypnos, the god of sleep. It was a freehand copy of the Hypnos in the British Museum, itself a Roman copy of a Greek work dating from the fourth century BC.
Lawrence took the bronze back to Oxford and gave it a place of honour in the bay window of his study in the bungalow. He later wrote: 'I would rather possess a fine piece of sculpture than anything in the world.'1
The whereabouts of Lawrence’s copy is unrecorded.
British Museum Shop (by courtesy of the Trustees)
1. T. E. Lawrence to his family, 16.3.1916, HL p. 315.
33 x 39 x 21.5
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From the catalogue to the T. E. Lawrence Centenary Exhibitionheld at the National Portrait Gallery, London, 1988-9Printed edition (National Portrait Gallery Publications, 1988) Copyright © N. Helari Ltd 1988Web edition Copyright © J & N Wilson 1998About this site: copyright, privacy, contact http://www.telawrence.info/



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