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Exhibitions and records of works of art

Prince Albert recognised the importance of photography to record and document notable exhibitions and works of art

CLAUDE-MARIE FERRIER (1811-89)

The Great Exhibition, 1851: Dancing Faun by Lequesne

1851

Salted paper print | 20.6 x 12.1 cm (image) | RCIN 2800132

Photograph of a bronze statue of a satyr dancing on a wine skin in a state of joyous inebriation. He is naked, except for a fig leaf, and stands on his left leg with his right leg in the air. He holds a pipe to his lips with his right hand while his left arm is raised in the air. The sculpture by Eugène-Louis Lequesne (1815-87) was exhibited at the Great Exhibition.

This photograph is from Volume IV (RCIN 2800003) of ' Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations, 1851: Reports by the Juries on the Subjects in the Thirty Classes into which the Exhibition was Divided'. The incredibly successful Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations, commonly known as the Great Exhibition, ran from May to October 1851. At the exhibition's conclusion, over 100 copies of the four volume 'Reports by the Juries' were distributed to foreign governments and notable participants. The reports consist of the juries' comments and assessments of the works displayed in the exhibition. The idea and decision to illustrate the reports with photographs is attributed to Prince Albert (1819-61).

  • Creator(s)

    Claude-Marie Ferrier (1811-89) (photographer)

  • 20.6 x 12.1 cm (image)

  • 'Dancing Faun'

  • Presented to Queen Victoria

  • Subject(s)
    • Arts, Recreation, Entertainment & Sport
      • Plastic arts
        • Sculpture
          • Statues
    • Natural Sciences & Mathematics
      • Zoology
        • Animals
          • Mythical creatures
            • Satyrs
            • Fauns (mythical creatures)
    • Science, Medicine and Technology
      • Wine making
        • Wine