Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 116

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1963, Side 116
98 TÍMARIT ÞJÓÐRÆKNISFÉLAGS ÍSLENDINGA the achievements of his studio were prodigious. * * * At the time of his triumphant visit to Denmark in 1819, he was literally swamped with commis- sions. On this occasion he went across country and stopped at most of the important cities in Europe. He was greeted like a king and the nobility vied among themselves to do him honor. When he arrived in Warsaw he was greeted by Alexand- er, Emperor of Russia, who embrac- ed him and decorated him with Russia’s highest honor. Everywhere he went, the rich and the rulers of all lands lionized him and loaded him with commissions to do statues and monuments of their heroes and famous men. All these commissions were eventually fulfilled, although it took years to accomplish this, in spite of the fact that Thorvaldsen had at this time most of the ablest artists in his studio. As before, he took the greatest personal care of the work, doing himself all the drawings, models, and put the last touches to the work. One of the famous works from this time is his statue of the astronomer, Copernicus in Cracow, Poland. His superb creations, “Night” and “Morning” so full of tenderness and spirit, were each done practically at one sitting in a passion of creative energy. Many great artists, especial- ly in the field of literature, are re- membered mainly for one supreme masterpiece: William Cullen Bryant, Gabriel Rossetti, Thoreau; and Edgar Allan Poe for his “Raven”. Even those who would disparage the work of Bertel Thorvaldsen as mere imitation, feel called upon to pay tribute to his masterpiece: “The Lion of Lucerne”. This is a colossal high relief carved into a mountain- side in Lucerne, Switzerland to commemorate the massacre of the Swiss guard of King Louis XVI, when the mob stormed the Louvre in the French Revolution. All great art is born of feeling and in this work of Thorvaldsen the feeling is overwhelming; here he has captured and held in solid stone all the courage, loyalty, sorrow and travail of humanity, depicted in the face and stance of the lion! He made the model which was then sent to Lucerne where the memorial was carved in the immense rock wall. As a visitor to Lucerne you can buy every kind of reproduction of the Lion of Lucerne, in wood, plaster, bronze, even in butter! But they are lifeless images, while the memo- rial itself is a living thing of strength and grandeur, almost as if it had been done there by God himself in this eloquent setting, with the overhanging vines and melancholy boughs forming a subdued shade and the falling water like muted organ music. This is something beyond technical skill; this is born out of travail and truth; the lion, wounded, dying, has fallen across the great French shield, with a look of unutterable woe and com- passion engraved on his face. In his body is depicted the strength, the courage, the loyalty to endure unto the end, to die for a cause! A century of dust had gathered over this heroic band of brave men, but here we can envisage them, —
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