The William Henry Fox Talbot Catalogue Raisonné

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Object within Schaaf no. 3706

V. Bust of Patroclus.

Object details

Created: Between 1 Aug 1835 and 7 Feb 1846

Image size: h 17.7cm x w 17.4cm

Object Type: Salted Paper Print

Mount: Page of the Fox Talbot Museum album no. 1, with ruled edge

Provenance:
The British Library, gift of Janet and Petronella Burnett-Brown, 1 March 2006
Fox Talbot Museum, Lacock Abbey, National Trust (00603)
Fox Talbot Museum notebook no. 1
Talbot's 1852 Royal Society of Arts album, 1841-1846

Owner: The British Library

Object owner number: Talbot Photo 16(10)

Collection: Talbot Collection

Supporting images

This object is part of Schaaf no. 3706

V. Bust of Patroclus.

Keywords: Sculpture

This is a larger variant which featured as a plate in the first fascicle of "The Pencil of Nature" (published 24 June 1844).

The smaller variant is Schaaf number 190.

This bust is one of the objects most photographed by Talbot and is a plaster copy of a marble bust which was excavated by the Scottish artist and archaeologist, Gavin Hamilton (1730-1798). The original marble, found at Hadrian’s villa in Tivoli in 1769, was later acquired by the British Museum in 1805, where at the time of writing it is on display (museum number 1805,0703.86 / Gallery 22).

Although the subject of the bust is not known for certain, many attempts or guesses have been made since its discovery, none of which have been proven for certain. Hence the generic descriptive title, “Head of a Homeric Hero: marble bearded head of a companion of Ulysses, probably from a group showing Ulysses and companions blinding Polyphemus”.

It is thought that the marble version of the bust dates from about 100-150 BC, and is itself thought to be a Roman copy of a Hellenistic original dating from of about 200 BC. Talbot’s plaster version is therefore part of a long line of copies. Alternatively, it could be seen as having an impressive pedigree.