Apollo and Pan Flute Playing Statue by Diana Sainz
by Diana Raquel Sainz
Title
Apollo and Pan Flute Playing Statue by Diana Sainz
Artist
Diana Raquel Sainz
Medium
Photograph - Photography - Digital Photography
Description
FEATURED IMAGE: Black and White Photography ~ FAA ~ 12/04/2015
FEATURED IMAGE: Photography and Paintings of Statues ~ FAA ~ 12/31/2013
FEATURED IMAGE: North Carolina Photography ~ FAA ~ 12/30/2013
FEATURED IMAGE: The Face ~ FAA 12/16/2013
FEATURED IMAGE: Art from the Past ~ FAA 12/16/2013
FEATURED IMAGE: Old and Used ~ FAA 12/16/2013
This Flute Playing Statue on the South Terrace Lawn of the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina is of Apollo on front side, and to the back of the statue is a smaller carving of Pan (not seen here). The statue is made of Terracotta, and sits closest to the Library Terrace on the right as you look at the magnificent house.
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The Statues in the gardens of the Biltmore Estate, location of the U.S.'s largest home, overlooking the Appalachian mountains was built by George Vanderbilt from 1889-1895. The grounds span 8,000 acres currently (down from 125,000).
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George Vanderbilt commissioned Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park, to create the stunning backdrop for his chateau. The resulting gardens and grounds are as spectacular as the house itself. A feast for the eyes, the ten acres of gardens also feature a remarkable array of flowers, many blooming through most of the year. From the orderly, manicured grounds framing the house to the lush forestland covering the mountains, the estate was carefully planned and designed by Olmsted's judicious hand. Today the grounds are still exquisitely maintained, and you are invited to explore them at your leisure.
http://www.ashevilleguidebook.com/wnc/cultural-attractions/biltmore_estate.htm
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ABOUT THE STATUE:
APOLLO - God of the sun, arts, prophecy and healing
Apollo son of Jupiter and brother of Diana, was the god of the sun,
prophecy, arts and healing. It was believed that he rode his chariot across the sky each day to give the world light. Since he was the god of healing, sick people prayed to him (When someone died suddenly, he was said to have been struck down by one of Apollo�s arrows). As god of music, Apollo is often depicted playing the lyre. He won several musical contestsby playing this instrument.
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PAN - God of shepherds and flocks.
Pan was the son of Hermes and a nymph. He was born with the legs and horns of a goat, which caused his own mother to reject him. Pan invented the shepherd�s pipe made out of bound reeds in varying lengths. Pan was considered to be the cause of the sudden fear that sometimes comes for no reason, especially in lonely places. That�s why it�s called "�panic"�.
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In Greek religion and mythology, Pan (Ancient Greek) is the god of the wild, shepherds and flocks, nature of mountain wilds, hunting and rustic music, and companion of the nymphs. His name originates within the Ancient Greek language, from the word paein, meaning "to pasture. He has the hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat, in the same manner as a faun or satyr. With his homeland in rustic Arcadia, he is recognized as the god of fields, groves, and wooded glens; because of this, Pan is connected to fertility and the season of spring. The ancient Greeks also considered Pan to be the god of theatrical criticism.
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The Muses
Muses were the daughters of Jupiter (Zeus) and Mnemosyne, born after the victory of the gods over the Titans. They became goddesses of Song and had the gift of prophecy (telling the future). They became closely associated with the cult of Apollo (god of the Sun, Arts, and Poetry) and guardians of the Oracle of Delphi (who could see the future).
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George Washington Vanderbilt, inheritor of part of the huge Vanderbilt fortune accrued by his grandfather, steamship and Biltmore House, late 1980s. railroad magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt, first visited Asheville in 1889 for his mother's health reasons. Although remote, the area around Asheville functioned as the center for a growing health industry that capitalized on good water, a pleasant climate, and a relaxing atmosphere. George Vanderbilt seemed to have little interest in his family's business. He was, however, an accomplished scholar, with a special interest in languages, philosophy, literature, architecture, and landscaping. Inheriting his father's appreciation of art, George often accompanied him on buying trips. He fell in love with the western North Carolina mountains and chose to build a southern country home in an area near the village of Best, just south of Asheville. Upon completion, Vanderbilt's "country home" included 255 rooms and over 125,000 acres of property, the largest residence ever built by a private citizen in the United States.
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Vanderbilt purchased the town of Best in 1889 and renamed it Biltmore Village. The name Biltmore derived from "Bildt," the region in Holland from which the Vanderbilt family originated, and "more," an old English word for rolling upland country. When Vanderbilt purchased Best, it consisted of a railway station, two small inns, a gristmill, and a few homes. By 1896, construction of Biltmore Village was under way, and the new village included cottages, shops, carpentry and other traditional craft schools, an Episcopal church, a post office, a laundry, a hospital, and the Biltmore Office Building. Architect Richard Morris Hunt, designer of New York's Tribune Building and the base of the Statue of Liberty, modeled Biltmore Village after a Swiss village.
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Vanderbilt originally had no style in mind for his house. When Hunt arrived, he and Vanderbilt agreed that the property, located where the Swannanoa and French Broad Rivers meet, resembled the French Loire Valley. The site's similarity to the French region prompted the house's Francis I style, reminiscent of sixteenth-century chateaux in the Loire Valley. Hunt equipped the chateau with all the modern conveniences possible, and he and Vanderbilt went on buying trips to supplement Vanderbilt's existing collection of art, books, and antiques. Well known for his problem-solving ability, Hunt fulfilled his client's extravagant requests. Vanderbilt wanted his house on a promontory with a back porch looking out onto a view of Mount Pisgah, even though he chose a site in a valley. Hunt suggested a plan to fill in the valley and build Vanderbilt's promontory, and workers hauled sufficient rock and soil to create a hill on which to build the house.
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The house's majesty necessitated matching grounds, and Vanderbilt issued the challenge of creating them to landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted. Best known for designing New York City's Central Park, Olmsted achieved a greater triumph at Biltmore, a property nine times larger than Central Park. Olmsted drew plans for formally landscaping the 200 acres immediately surrounding the house, laying out the English Walled Garden, the Italian Garden, and a man made lake called the Lagoon. He also planned to refurbish forests and create farms and a nursery on the rest of the land.
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Gifford Pinchot managed the reforestation project. The first trained forester in the United States, Pinchot planned New York State's Adirondack Park and founded the U.S. Forest Service. Vanderbilt's forest, named Pisgah Forest, began about 10 miles from Biltmore and extended 60 miles to the west. Pinchot established the Biltmore Forest School and developed a comprehensive plan to continue the tree nursery, reforestation, and harvest projects. His principles of sustained yield, which struck a balance between cutting timber and growing new trees, first developed at Biltmore and remain standard practice in forestry today. The estate also had a dairy farm, a pig farm, and a poultry farm on site.
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Construction of the house, completed by hundreds of laborers, took place between 1890 and 1895 and provided employment for much of the local population. Workers built a spur railway to bring in supplies from the depot in Biltmore Village to the construction site three miles away. Limestone, the fundamental building stone used in the house, was shipped from Indiana, and workers built a brick factory and a woodworking factory on site as well. The finished masterpiece included walk-in refrigeration, electricity, advanced plumbing, and central heating, all at a time when many of Vanderbilt's neighbors still used outhouses.
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The house was officially opened on Christmas Eve 1895, with 350 family members and friends in attendance. Stacks of gifts for employees' children stood under a 30-foot Christmas tree in the enormous banquet hall. The party set a precedent for entertaining at Biltmore, and in following years, the house became a haven of amusement for the Vanderbilts - George Vanderbilt married Edith Stuyvesant Dresser in 1898, and their only child, Cornelia, was born in 1900-and their wealthy friends. Guests enjoyed formal dinners and balls, or slipped into the extensive library for reading and study. The gymnasium, bowling alley, swimming pool, and ping-pong table provided a variety of diversions. Outdoor activities included hunting, fishing, riding, hiking, croquet, archery, and strolling the grounds. The Vanderbilts' lifestyle at Biltmore depended tremendously on the service staff, with about 80 servants required to run the house and stables efficiently.
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In later years, the Vanderbilt family spent more and more time away from the estate. The 1902 depression hit the family fortune hard. With Biltmore's operating costs reaching roughly $6,000 a month, the family shut down the estate and sailed to Europe. Despite the financial crisis, Mrs. Vanderbilt later set up a school at Biltmore to teach domestic arts and crafts to local women.
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George Vanderbilt died in March 1914. His daughter Cornelia inherited a trust fund left by her father, while Edith inherited Biltmore's house and lands. Edith sold the federal government a large part of Pisgah Forest, which now makes up the core of Pisgah National Forest, reducing the Biltmore property to a more manageable 8,000 acres. A flood destroyed Olmsted's nursery in 1916, but the dairy thrived and paid for the estate's maintenance.
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Cornelia married British diplomat John Francis Amherst Cecil in 1924, and their sons George and William spent much of their childhood at Biltmore. Edith married Senator Peter G. Gerry in 1925 and moved out of Biltmore, leaving its operations to the Cecils. During the First World War and the Great Depression, Junius Adams, a local judge, was employed to manage the property. He incorporated Biltmore and opened the house to visitors for the first time in 1930.
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Edith died in 1958, and in 1960 the Cecil sons split the Biltmore property. George took the dairy and a portion of the estate, while William took the house and the part of the estate known as Biltmore Forest. William became head of the Biltmore Company and a leading historic preservation advocate. Although the U.S. government has declared Biltmore a National Historic Landmark, it operates without federal grants or subsidies and pays property taxes. The property also contributes significantly to the economy of Asheville and western North Carolina. Roughly 750,000 visitors each year come to the estate and take the self-guided tour, which includes 85 rooms of the house as well as the grounds.
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Biltmore House is an architectural marvel, and visitors can't get enough of the details that illustrate the vastness of the estate.
More than 1 million people visit Biltmore every year.
Biltmore House is 175,000 square feet.
The original estate was 125,000 acres.
Currently the estate is approximately 8,000 acres.
86,700 acres of Pisgah Forest were sold to the federal government in 1914.
The landscaped gardens cover 75 acres.
Construction of Biltmore House took six years.
The vineyards span 94 acres.
170,000 cases of Biltmore wine are sold annually.
Biltmore House has 250 rooms.
There are 35 bedrooms.
There are more bathrooms (43) than bedrooms.
In 1894, the estate employed 438 people.
30 to 35 domestic servants waited on the Vanderbilts.
The house has 26 servant bedrooms; the stable complex has another 40 servant rooms.
There are 65 fireplaces.
16 chimneys crest the roof.
The banquet hall ceiling soars seven stories high.
The banquet hall table is 40 feet long and seats 64.
The boilers have a capacity of 20,000 gallons.
The library houses approximately 10,000 books.
The Vanderbilt art collection includes 185 paintings.
There are 1,228 prints in the Vanderbilt collection.
George Washington Vanderbilt died at age 51 in 1914.
Edith Vanderbilt Gerry died at age 85 in 1958.
Cornelia Vanderbilt Cecil died at age 76 in 1976.
There are 15 occupied houses on the estate today.
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December 16th, 2013
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