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Luzern Löwendenkmal

Giorgio Sommer

Artwork Details

Luzern Löwendenkmal
1880-1914
Giorgio Sommer
albumen print on paper
7 3/4 in x 9 3/4 in (19.68 cm x 24.77 cm)
Gift of Mr. & Mrs. W. Howard Bond
1984/1.307

On Display

Not currently on display

Description

Subject Matter:

Filling this photograph’s frame is a rock wall with a carved sculpture at its center. The sculpture depicts a slain lion lying in a shadowed grotto. Impaled by a broken spear, the lion's head and paws are draped over a shield bearing the fleur-de-lis—the symbol of the French monarchy. To the left of the lion is a shield with the Swiss coat of arms on it. This work is a memorial for the Swiss Guards killed during the French Revolution. Overwhelmed by superior numbers, over seven hundred of these soldiers were killed in the fighting or massacred after their surrender. Carved in the rock face below the lion are lines commemorating these fallen soldiers and lists the names of the officers who died. Above the lion’s grotto are the latin words, “Helvetiorum Fidei ac Virtuti,” meaning “To the loyalty and bravery of the Swiss.”  Situated in a former sandstone-quarry, the shadowy tones of the roughly hewn rock face underscore the melancholy nature of the monument.

Physical Description:

This photograph depicts a sculpture of a slain lion lying in a grotto, carved into a wall of rock.  Above and below the lion is latin text.

Usage Rights:

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