Bacchante with vine leaves
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, ca. 1872–75
About this artwork
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's *Bacchante with Vine Leaves* (ca. 1872–75) captures the wild ecstasy of a follower of Bacchus, the Roman god of wine, adorned with twisting vines and leaves that evoke Dionysian revelry. This intimate terracotta sculpture, standing 15 inches tall on a marble base, showcases a woman's animated face and flowing hair, her expression alive with passion and abandon. Carpeaux, a leading French sculptor of the Second Empire, blended neoclassical precision with romantic vitality, infusing his works with dramatic movement and sensuality. Crafted in terracotta—a versatile, earthy medium favored for its warmth and malleability—this piece likely served as a modello, or study model, for potential marble versions. Carpeaux's technique highlights his mastery of surface texture: the soft modeling of flesh contrasts with the crisp, leafy details, bringing mythological fervor into tangible form. Produced late in his career, it reflects his enduring fascination with exuberant female figures, seen in iconic works like those adorning the Paris Opéra. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's European Sculpture and Decorative Arts department (acquired via the Fletcher Fund in 1925), this sculpture invites visitors to revel in 19th-century France's fusion of antiquity and modernity, celebrating life's intoxicating joys through art.