Sunday, January 27, 2008

Ugolino and His Sons



This is a quick study from my favorite sculpture at the Met, Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's Ugolino and His Sons.

From Dante's Inferno, this sculpture depicts the moment when Ugolino, condemned to die of starvation, yields to the temptation to devour his children and grandchildren, who cry out to him:

But when to our somber cell was thrown
A slender ray, and each face was lit
I saw in each the aspect of my own,
For very grief both of my hands I bit,
And suddenly from the floor arising they,
Thinking my hunger was the cause of it,
Exclaimed: Father eat thou of us, and stay
Our suffering: thou didst our being dress
In this sad flesh; now strip it all away.