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Enlightenment: Art and Civilization
Wax model of the Laocoon
To hear an audio description of this object, written especially for blind and partially sighted visitors, follow this link: Audio description (3m 34s) (mp3 format, 2.56 MB). To download, right click and 'save target as' (PC) or hold down 'Control' key and click, and select 'Download Link to Disc' (Mac).
The group depicts Laocoon, a Trojan prince and priest of Apollo, and his two sons. According to legend, they tried to stop the Trojans from opening the city gates to the wooden horse, but were killed by serpents from the sea.
The model is a copy of a late Hellenistic (Greek) marble of the group, now in the Vatican Museum. This was rediscovered in Rome in January 1506, causing immense excitement. It was bought by Pope Julius II who had it displayed in the Belvedere with other sculptures considered to represent the essence of Greek idealistic art. It remained there until it was taken to Paris in 1798, having been ceded to the French in the Napoleonic wars. After Napoleon's defeat, the marble returned to Rome in 1816.
For several centuries the Laocoon group ranked with the Apollo Belvedere as one of the finest surviving sculptures from the ancient world, and were among the inspirations for the 'Greek revival' of the late-eighteenth century.
Copies of the Laocoon group were made in all sizes and media, often bronze, but this fine red beeswax copy is very unusual. It is uncertain exactly when it was made or for whom, but in May 1758 the collector and antiquary Thomas Hollis (1720-74) presented it to the British Museum.



