Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 114

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 114
96 TÍMARIT ÞJÓÐRÆKNISFÉLAGS ÍSLENDINGA others there are who take every- thing in big sweeps, literally absorbing in the mass, and grow great by dipping their bucket in the well of knowledge. The Established Order is ever re- sentful of the pressing youth, and many trials awaited this youthful blonde Viking from the North. But he worked incessantly , sketched, read, modelled, studied. To help his finances he copied pictures for prosperous dealers, who made it their business thus to employ ’prentice talent. It was not many years later that we find him oc- cupying the studio of Flaxman and more than able to fill this strong man’s place. If you examine Flax- man’s work, and then see Thorvald- sen’s it is like multiplying by one hundred, Flaxman’s was delicate and exquisite, Thorvaldsen’s heroic and imposing, with its true inspir- ation from the Greek. If Thorvald- sen was not an inventive, a creative genius, he was truly receptive and responsive and he builded strongly on the best that had been done. He was not a fighter or iconoclast, he kept clear of all factions, made friends of Protestants and Catholics alike. Indeed, the Pope is quoted as saying: “Thorvaldsen is a good Catholic, only he does not know it”. But the first years in Rome were hard, and mostly disappointing, for various reasons, among them a prolonged illness, which stole much time from his cherished three years and left him with a temporary inertia. The time was at hand when he would have to return to Den- mark, and he had accomplished nothing! He was almost destitute, the last remittance from Copen- hagen being merely enough for his fare home. He wanted desperately to make one worth while effort be- fore leaving and started modelling his full-size statue of Jason. But to himself he was a hard taskmaster, and when the model was finished he did not like it, and forthwith destroyed it. This was in the year 1802 and he had been in Rome for four years. The trip home was scheduled for the following fall, so he decided to build a new model of Jason, a much larger one this time, — and he finished it shortly after the new year. It was greatly ad- mired for its fine workmanship, and his friend, Madame Brun, provided money for having it cast in plaster. Such a masterpiece, men said, had never been created since the era of Anient Greece! But, of course, Thor- valdsen had money to carve the statue from marble, and now the time had come to leave, — the actual day of leavetaking had arrived! Thorvaldsen stood sad and melan- choly in his studio, when there arrived the rich English art lover and banker, Sir Thomas Hope, to see Jason. He asked the sculptor how much it would cost to carve the statue from marble, and Thorvald- sen mentioned 6,000 crowns. Hope thought this was inadequate and added another 2,000, commissioning Thorvaldsen to do the work. Thus was his return to Denmark post- poned. With renewed hope he plunged with vigour into a variety of works, and commissions began to roll in.
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