This unique sculpture invites visitors to survey its lush surface, behind
which lie several stories. The monumental piece, 22 feet in circumference,
is titled The Story of the Vine (Poem de la Vigne). The 6,000 pound cast
bronze vessel has 58 separately formed animated figures, entwined with
grapevines, visually narrating the story of winemaking. A close look at the
base reveals cupids battling growth-destroying insects, as cupids above
squeeze the abundant fruit of its juice. Larger playful figures feature
Bacchus (the god of wine), Silenus (the drunken attendant and nurse to
Bacchus), the goddess Diana (lover of the woods and wild things), satyrs
(attendants to Bacchus), and bacchantes (priestess to Bacchus).
Frenchman Paul Gustav Dore created the 11-foot-high vessel in 1877-78. When
the French Thiebaut Brothers Foundry finished casting the piece, Dore¹s
finances were in the red, and with his death five years later, the bill was
still unpaid. In an attempt to retrieve its money, the Foundry sent the
extravagant piece to the World¹s Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago,
where it was exhibited for a viewing fee. There, San Franciscan Michael de
Young, a director and a national commissioner at large to the fair, saw it.
After the Chicago venue closed, the vase was shipped to California, an apt
move with California wine already touted as the best in the United States.
The vase was displayed at the Midwinter Fair of 1894 that was held in Golden
Gate Park. When the Midwinter Fair closed, de Young desired to keep the
piece for the Memorial Museum he was about to launch.'
¹Quoted from SAN
FRANCISCO¹S GOLDEN GATE PARK by Christopher Pollock Book Compilation 2001,
West Winds Press
For more on the vase, visit these sites:
http://www.rightreading.com/ggp/dore.vase/dore.vase.htm
http://charon.sfsu.edu/DORE/DoreVase.html
This enormous bronze sculpture now stands in front of the new de Young
Museum in Golden Gate Park.
The photo is a close up of the base of the vase.
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