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Charles Jean Marie Degeorge (1837-1888) The Youth of Aristotle (1875) Marble; Musée d’Orsay, Paris
Degeorge’s statue depicts the young philosopher-to-be studying a scroll. The left-side view makes it clear that he is naked except for the cloak across his lap on which the scroll rests. Previously I’d stated that he looked bored, and I was also puzzled by what looked like a ball or a piece of fruit in his right hand. Then in June 2012 I received an e-mail which explains what’s really going on...
I am sorry, but the explanations given by your site and also by Wikipedia and other sites are completely wrong as to what this statue is portraying. The statue illustrates a famous story from antiquity about Aristotle. Aristotle is not portrayed here as "bored." He was so zealous a student that he liked to stay up reading and minimize sleep; so he set a tin pan beside his chair and held a small rock in his hand, so that when he dozed off from lack of sleep the rock would hit the pan and wake him up again. The sculptor has marvelously caught the moment just before the rock is dropped, allowing Aristotle to revive, and maintain his self-imposed sleep deprivation so he could study more and more. -- -- Thomas L. Pangle Joe R. Long Endowed Chair in Democratic Studies Department of Government
University of Texas at Austin https://webspace.utexas.edu/tlp374/www/index.html Co-Director, Thomas Jefferson Center for the Study of Core Texts and Ideas http://www.utexas.edu/cola/centers/coretexts/
So, many thanks to Dr. Pangle for setting me straight on that point.
In the aforementioned left side view you can see lots of other statues in the background, including Falguière’s Winner of the Cockfight and Moulin’s Lucky Find at Pompeii..
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