Spring in the guise of Flora (one of a pair)

Pietro Bernini Italian
Assisted by Gian Lorenzo Bernini Italian

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 534

The two terms were made in 1616 by Pietro Bernini (1562–1629) with the assistance of his more famous son, the sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680), for Cardinal Scipione Borghese. Each consisting of a half-body merging into a tapering pedestal, they originally stood in the gardens of the Villa Borghese in Rome, at the entrance to the cardinal's Vigna di Porta Pinciana. Appropriately laden with fruits and flowers, the Flora and Priapus (see 1990.53.2), carved in an energetic, rustic fashion, symbolize the abundance of nature in spring and autumn.

Spring in the guise of Flora (one of a pair), Pietro Bernini (Italian, 1562–1629), Marble, Italian, Rome

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