Myths of Male Same-Sex
Love in the Art of the Italian Renaissance
Ann Haughton*
Art
History, University of Warwick
*Correspondence: ann.haughton@warwick.ac.uk
Abstract Visual culture has much to contribute
to an understanding of the history of sexuality. Yet, to date, the depiction of
pederasty in the art of the Renaissance has not been covered adequately by
dominant theoretical paradigms. Moreover, the interpretive approach of traditional
art historical discourse has been both limited and limiting in its timidity
toward matters concerning the representation of sexual proclivity between
males. This article will address the ways in which Italian Renaissance artistic
depictions of some mythological narratives were enmeshed with the period’s
attitudes toward sexual and social relationships between men.
Particular attention is
paid here to the manner in which, under the veneer of a mythological narrative,
certain works of art embodied a complex set of messages that encoded issues of
masculine behaviour and performance in the context of intergenerational
same-sex erotic relationships. The primary case studies under
investigation for these concerns of gender and sexuality in this particular
context are Benvenuto Cellini’s marble Apollo and Hyacinth (1545), and Giulio Romano’s drawing of Apollo and Cyparissus (1524). By incorporating pictorial analysis, social history, and gender
and sexuality studies, new possibilities will be offered for evaluating these
artworks as visual chronicles of particular sexual and cultural mores of the
period. Furthermore, this article will consider how visual representation of
these mythic narratives of erotic behaviour between males conformed to the
culturally defined sexual and social roles relating to the articulation of
power that permeated one of the greatest milestones in art history.
Keywords: Italian Renaissance art,
art history, Apollo and Hyacinth, Apollo and Cyparissus, pederasty, sexuality
Introduction
Art was a fundamental part of the
history of the Italian Renaissance, and visual images were not only creations
of the individuals who designed and executed them but also of the society which
produced these creators. Yet the common practice of pederasty, or male same-sex
desire between a youth and an older man, has never mapped easily onto
traditional notions concerned with representations of love and desire in the
discursive field of art history (see Saslow,
1989; Ruggiero, 1985).[1]
Pederasty, as a formal bond between
an adult man and an adolescent boy, which consisted of loving and often sexual
relations has historically existed in a variety of forms and practices within
different cultures, including ancient Greece and Renaissance Italy. Whilst
pederasty existed in these cultures, attitudes were not entirely uniform. It
was regarded as an erotic and pedagogic institution in ancient Greece, a more
debated issue in Roman culture and a common phenomenon in Renaissance Florence.[2] In
these cultures, the love by men for adolescent males was regarded as a fundamental
aspect of human experience. Surviving art and literature indicate that such
feelings between adult higher class males were rare, and there is no evidence
that pre-pubescent boys were the subject of interest (see Downing, 1990: 146–59; Lear
and Cantarella, 2009: 139–64).
As an erotic and educational custom,
pederasty was most commonplace among the upper classes as a means of teaching
the young and conveying to them important cultural values such as courage,
respect and restraint. Whilst sociological approaches to the historical study
of gender, sexuality and identity in society and culture have become
increasingly discursive in the last few decades, art historians still remain
hesitant in expanding their purview beyond
perceived Renaissance
heterosexual ‘norms’.
In the expansive study of the history
of Renaissance art, there has been rare acknowledgement of the manner in which
certain works of art can be used as a visual chronicle of how numerous
individuals lived at variance with those perceived norms by participating in
male intergenerational sexual and social relationships.[3]
It is difficult to understand why these issues have been denied or suppressed, but
Diane Wolfthal offers the proposal that: ‘it could be part of an outgrowth of
the long-standing desire to view art as the embodiment of noble human action or
as the expression of the highest and purest ideals. Sexual desire and activity,
by contrast, were all too often deemed base or evil, and so ignored’ (Wolfthal, 2010: 4).
Unlike Renaissance Italy and
classical Greece, pederasty does not necessarily fit into our habitual
categories of understanding age-asymmetrical sexual relationships, and men who
characteristically prefer relations with youths are considered in our society
deserving of sanction, if not outright condemnation. But in these past
cultures, this type of social and sexual activity was often seen as an
educational institution for the inculcation of moral and cultural values by the
older man to the younger, as well as a form of sexual expression. In fact,
pederastic relations were often considered to be a transient and natural stage
in the lives of both adults and youths (Percy,
1996: 1). However, as perspicacious readings of ancient Greek sources
reveal, the erastes‑ eromenos
relationship was based upon dyadic mentorship fundamental to that culture’s
social and educational system (Dover, 1978:
88–91). Moreover, as Halperin explains, these acts were governed by strict
social rules and etiquette:
Active and passive sexual roles are necessarily
isomorphic with superordinate and subordinate social status; hence, an adult
male citizen of Athens can have legitimate sexual relations only with statutory
minors (his inferiors not in age but in social and political status); the
proper targets of his sexual desire include, specifically, women, boys,
foreigners, and slaves—all of them persons who do not enjoy the same legal and
political rights and privileges that he does. Furthermore, what a citizen does
in bed reflects the differential in status that distinguishes him from his
sexual partner: the citizen's superior prestige and authority express
themselves in his sexual precedence and in his power to initiate a sexual act,
his right to obtain pleasure from it, and his assumption of an insertive rather
than a receptive sexual role. (Halperin,
1990: 30–31)
The Renaissance itself was a period that
was notably concerned with the relationship between the written and the visual.
Myths were often fictional stories told in ancient cultures to explain a
practice, belief, or natural occurrence even if they were unproven. The
rediscovery of these exciting narratives, as well as other classical texts, had
an intense effect on the Renaissance intellect causing a profound
transformation in Italian culture.[4]
Fuelled in large part by these stories, the Renaissance imagination became
endowed with a pantheon of divinities and heroes a catalogue of licentious
images, and a set of erotic references by which deviance and desire could be
encoded into contemporary experiences.[5]
Consequently, art which captured this special resonance between a mythical
account and visual object enjoyed wildfire popularity. Themes of male same-sex
love taken from Ovid’s Metamorphoses
imparted a paradigmatic narrative currency that was transmitted across time by
depicting how love and sex in a variety of forms was supremely important to the
gods. Therefore visual rendition of mythological narratives such as those found
in Metamorphoses, became common
analogies to express the virtues of elegiac, sexual desire and endless tragic
love.
For some artists and their patrons,
new interest in a sensuous and sensual world where pagan deities indulged in
cruelty, mischief and promiscuity brought an ennobling reference. Classical
texts could be appropriated less as historical documents than as works, adapted
or distorted, to voice their own interests, perspectives, and anxieties—even
when the sexual activities of pagan protagonists existed, sometimes uneasily,
alongside the official symbols and doctrines of the Church. Two works of art
which signify how mythological narratives were enmeshed with Renaissance
attitudes toward intergenerational male same-sex behaviour and its attendant
ideological complexities are Benvenuto Cellini’s marble sculpture of Apollo
and Hyacinth (1545–48) and Giulio Romano’s drawing of Apollo and
Cyparissus (1524).
Figure 1.
Benvenuto Cellini, Apollo and Hyacinth (1545–48). Marble, Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence.
Figure 2. Giulio Romano, Apollo
and Cyparissus (c.1523–27). Pen and ink with wash, National Museum,
Stockholm.
As pederastic models of the
superordinate adult Apollo with his subordinate adolescent male beloveds, these
works exemplify how the sexual behaviour and experience which prevailed between
age-asymmetrical males in the Renaissance, as well as the psychological meanings,
patterns and identities assigned to those acts, found expression in the visual
domain of the period. Yet, to date, the encoded messages within both these
images have been studied only in the most cursory fashion.
By taking as its departure point
Michael Rocke’s research into the denunciations, sentencing and interrogations
revealed in extant fifteenth-century Florentine judicial records, together with
a detailed analysis of these works of art, this article aims to reveal a
fascinating insight into visual culture beyond the current conventional limited
and limiting heterosexual or feminist biased art historical discourse.[6] It
will also maintain that it is critically important to open our minds to the
understanding of works of art which appear to reflect the attitudes, sexual
specificities and historical contingencies of, not just Renaissance Italy, but
any given period in the past. Only then, I will argue, can new questions
surface about the responses such artworks engendered through the messages they
expressed, and only then will we gain a closer understanding of a range of
visual codes and embodied responses involved in their execution, reception and
articulation.
By situating these works both
thematically and compositionally alongside contemporary behavioural codes of
masculine sexual and social comportment, the study to follow will consider each
as the articulation of Renaissance power dynamics, differentials and
constructs. Furthermore, it will offer a more nuanced study and reappraisal of
the allegorical and iconographic elements encapsulated in these works, in order
to encourage closer engagement with how such imagery depicting myths of male
love could function in Renaissance visual and political culture.
Social and cultural contexts
In his pioneering study of the social
history of sexual conduct between males, Michael Rocke informs us in Forbidden Friendships that sodomy in
general, and particularly its prosecution, was well-documented in Renaissance
Florence.[7] Of
particular note is the extent to which pederastic relationships emerge with
vigour in Florence’s legislative records. Rocke’s research into the records
used by the magistracy founded in 1432 to investigate and prosecute offenders
accused of sodomy suggests that cultural and sexual norms operated within a
strict hierarchy where equality was detested (Rocke, 1996: 4–14).
Sex between males did not preclude
sex with females but a youth who was submissive and allowed themselves to be
sodomised was regarded as just as inferior as a woman. Rocke lucidly
illustrates that during this seventy-year period a lurid sexual culture existed
where these same-sex acts were not the divergent transgressions of a marginal
minority, but an integral facet of masculine behaviour (Rocke, 1996: 45–84). At a time when lived eroticism conformed to
rules of social hierarchy with sexual roles tied to age as well as class, in a
virile society such as Renaissance Florence, subjugation, domination and the
imposition of one’s will were considered defining characteristics. The
importance of adherence to prescribed gender roles was paramount, therefore how
men behaved sexually contributed fundamentally to the shape of public life in a
broader sense (Mazo-Karras, 2003: 3–8;
Rocke, 1996: 87–111).
In common with the cultures of
ancient Greece and Rome, Renaissance sexual ethics and behaviour were governed
not by the hetero-homosexual context but by the question of active-passive
roles that were enmeshed with important comportmental codes associated with
these hierarchal stratifications. This view is shared by Foucault in his
seminal philosophy on the history of sexuality, where he states that classical
antiquity ‘did not classify sexual conduct according to sex, but according to
social class and the categories of activity and passivity’ (Foucault, 1978: 1–14).
Nevertheless, these male erotic
interactions faced fervent ecclesiastical and theological proscriptions with
Domenico of Prato (1389–1432) pointing to the long standing prevalence of
pederasty in court circles: ‘those marvellous competitions of fencing,
tournaments and high jousts are no longer furiously performed for women; he who
best can, now does his shows for young lads’ (Segre, 1892: 4–85). San Bernardino of Sienna expressed concern that
these male relationships were a threat to marriage: ‘Woe to him who doesn’t
take a wife when he has the time and a legitimate reason! For remaining single
they become sodomites. And take this as a general rule. When you see a man the
right age and in good health who doesn’t take a wife, take it as a bad sign
about him, if he hasn’t been practising chastity for spiritual reasons’ (Bernardino, 1989).
The tension that existed between
Renaissance Italian judicial and religious prohibition and commonplace behaviour
made it a public affair. Therefore, as Rocke informs us, where sexual activity
between men was expected to be temporary and cyclical, there were harsher
penalties levied upon adults who continue homoerotic activities with those who
are beyond youth. Rocke has estimated that at least two-thirds of all
Florentine males were implicated by the time they reached the age of forty, and
these figures do not include the magistracies themselves: ‘at one time or
another and with varying significance and degrees of involvement, pederastic
relations formed part of the life experience of many Italian males of the late
medieval and early modern period’ (Rocke,
1996: 15). It was considered degrading to remain a passive agent once a
grown man, therefore only as long as the passive partner were a boy could he
expect leniency.
The significance of the information
Rocke has gleaned from these judicial records for the following interpretation
of both the statue of Apollo and Hyacinth
and the drawing of Apollo with Cyparissus
cannot be overstated. Moreover, any study of the conception and execution of
these works of art should not be detached from our understanding of the social
circumstances under which male homoerotic relations were expressed in
Renaissance Florence. If we take this historically and culturally framed
juridical visibility of male same-sex relations as a departure point, it is
possible to evaluate the complex and convoluted meanings within the narrative
of the mythic sources underpinning these works and to decode and contextualise
the symbolic messages they contain. It will then become clearer how
interpersonal dynamics of male desire and social relationships extended into
the field of artistic representation. With recourse to Rocke’s aforementioned
sociological discourse, I will now explore the extent to which both Cellini’s
sculptural group of Apollo and Hyacinth and Romano’s drawing of Apollo
and Cyparissus appear to substantiate these surviving judicial records.
Analysis of Myths and Art Works
Apollo is placed prominently in Metamorphoses
as one of the most important Olympian gods, who as the eternal erastes had the most flagrant and prolific male relationships of
all the divinities.[8]
Apollo follows the archetypal antique male model of sexual behaviour in Ovid’s
text, where most males desired both males and females and acted upon both kinds
of desire by having legitimate sexual relations with both sexes. Although
divinities such as Apollo frequently and recklessly fell in love with other
males, they rarely did so with other male gods or with adult human men; their
adoration was usually reserved for the most beautiful of human adolescents.[9]
Apollo’s romances with younger males are a popular feature in Renaissance
artistic production, thereby promoting the notion of male love being divinely
approved with mortal male lovers. Often exalted for their royal bloodline or
divine forebears, and bestowed with many similar qualities of beauty and
pulchritude to their divine counterparts, these subjects shared both exoticism
and otherworldliness; characteristics which invoked considerable interest from
the flourishing artistic community and their patrons during the Renaissance.
There are a number of ancient myths
conveying the custom of paiderastia as
the socially acceptable erotic relationship between a man and a youth.[10] For
example, the myth of Jupiter and Ganymede
was very popular in Renaissance art and there are over two hundred images still
extant today. However, the inveterate womanizer Jupiter is reported to have taken
Ganymede as his only masculine love, who as a direct result of this honour
became both exemplified and sanctioned as the supreme love of the supreme god,
whereas Apollo had more male loves than any other god. In contrast to Ganymede,
who was the embodiment of the beloved who was forever loved and desired,
Apollo is often depicted as the paradigmatic lover.
In both Cellini’s marble sculpture of
Apollo and Hyacinth (Figure 1) and Romano’s
drawing of Apollo and Cyparissus (Figure
2) paramount focus is bestowed on Apollo’s dominant role as the
accomplished adult, whose role is to act as a consummate initiator to his
younger lovers. Textual evidence of the ways in which pederasty pervaded sexual
and social relations between men in classical antiquity can also be found in
several classical texts, including Plato’s Republic:
It does not become a lover to forget that all
adolescents in some sort sting and stir the amorous lover of youth and appear
to him deserving of his attention and desirable … but the euphemistic invention
of some lover who can feel no distaste for sallowness when it accompanies the
blooming time of youth? And, in short, there is no pretext you do not allege
and there is nothing you shrink from saying to justify you in not rejecting any
who are in the bloom of their prime. (Plato, 474d–475a)
In Metamorphoses (Ovid
Met. X: 171–219),
Hyacinth was a beautiful mortal youth, loved equally by the god Apollo and the
West Wind Zephyr. Apollo and Hyacinth took turns throwing the discus but when Hyacinth
ran to catch the discus thrown by Apollo, he was struck as it fell to the
ground, and died. Apollo refused to allow Hades to claim the young man; rather,
he made a flower, the hyacinth, from his spilled blood. The tears of Apollo
stained the newly formed flower's petals with a sign of his grief. For Ovid’s
tale of Apollo’s neglect of his duties and the tragic demise of his beloved
Hyacinth, see Appendix I.
Figure 3.
Benvenuto Cellini, Apollo and Hyacinth (1545–48). Marble, Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence.
Cellini’s sculptural rendition of
this Ovidian narrative, as depicted in Figure
3, is executed in white marble and stands 191 x 75 cm (Figs. 1a–c).[11] The
statue appears to capture the very moment after Hyacinth has been felled by the
discus but is yet to transform into his other being. The figure of Apollo is
posed with his left leg slightly advanced with its foot on the corner of the
base and his right leg erect. His right hand reaches back, caressing the hair
of the kneeling and significantly smaller Hyacinth. The figure of Hyacinth is
positioned slightly behind that of Apollo with his torso turned in the opposite
direction, but with his head pivoting backwards and upwards over the left
shoulder. The boy’s right and left legs are respectively extended behind and
along the base and the left side of the work. With the exception of a diadem or
Phrygian cap, Apollo is naked, as is Hyacinth. Both figures have elaborately
carved curled hairstyles in the classical tradition. Apollo faces away from
Hyacinth as if gazing into the distance, whilst Hyacinth is posed with his half
open mouth displaying sensuous, full and parted lips almost adjacent to
Apollo’s groin. Apollo’s left wrist rests on his thigh, and in this hand he
holds a broken object, possibly part of the discus. The fingers of Hyacinth’s
left hand are badly damaged but Hyacinth’s right hand reaches upwards with
fingers touching Apollo’s buttocks and his wrist is clasped around an object
that seems to be a branch or root of a plant.
According to the other myth from
Ovid’s Metamorphoses under discussion here, Cyparissus was also a
beloved young mortal, but one to whom Apollo bequeathed a beautiful tame stag (Ovid Met.
X 81–154). When Cyparissus accidently killed this stag whilst he was being
educated in the art of hunting by his lover Apollo, he was distraught by his
loss. All of the god’s consolations were in vain and Cyparissus was so
distressed that he begged to be allowed to mourn forever. Eventually Apollo
obliged by turning him into a cypress tree, which appears to be sad because of
the droplets of sap that form on its trunk. For Ovid’s narrative concerning
Apollo’s love for Cyparissus, see
Appendix II.
Figure 4. Giulio Romano, Apollo
and Cyparissus (c.1523–27). Pen and ink with wash, National Museum,
Stockholm.
Giulio Romano’s drawing of Ovid’s
tale of Apollo and Cyparissus appears
to be the original and there are no known extant engravings (Figure 4). The provenance and dating of
the original work are both inconclusive but Vasari mentions that before he left
Rome in 1524, Giulio designed the scene for his friend and financial consultant
Baldassarre Turini’s Villa Lante (Vasari,
1999: 133–38). The scene depicts an older seated and cloaked Apollo with a
nude juvenile Cyparissus on his lap. Apollo’s right hand touches the youth’s
face whilst their lips meet in a kiss. Apollo’s left hand is placed in
Cyparissus’ groin and the index finger seems to touch the boy’s penis. The
fabric of Apollo’s garment separates the two figures as Cyparissus straddles
his left knee. Apollo’s legs are spread
with feet placed on the ground. The youth’s right foot is also placed on the
ground but the left is raised. Cyparissus holds an upright archer’s bow in his
left hand, whilst a musical bow lies abandoned in the foreground of the
composition. The stringed musical instrument that the bow would accompany leans
neglected against the rock on which the pair are seated. The neck of the rock
terminates in a carving of a serpent’s head, pointing in the direction of a
clothed and classically draped female onlooker to the far right of the
composition. This female figure inserts her left index finger in her mouth as
she covertly witnesses their embrace. Her expression is ambiguous but there is
little indication of shock or outrage. All the protagonists are positioned in
the middle ground but there is a large tree dividing the central background.
Figure 5. Apollo’s hand touching
Cyparissus’ penis, detail of Apollo and Cyparissus.
It is my own contention that both
Cellini and Romano chose Ovid’s poems narrating these myths as specific
subjects for their respective works because they address the transition from,
or death of, youth within a pederastic context. Absolutely fundamental to my
analysis of the Apollo and Hyacinth statue and the drawing of Apollo
and Cyparissus is the proposition that in these two representations of
Apollo with his young lovers, Hyacinth and Cyparissus do not literally
transform into botanical entities as such. I instead argue that these youths
who die as juveniles at the hands of Apollo, now await not literal
metamorphosis into flowers or trees but accession to adulthood. In the
following passages, I will elucidate how each artist’s interpretation of these
myths provides a structured initiatory and pedagogical model connected to rites
that mark the passage from youth to adulthood.[12]
Apollo and Hyacinth by Benvenuto Cellini (1545–48)
Firstly, we will focus on the statute of Apollo and Hyacinth (Figure 1), which was Cellini’s
first foray into sculpture from metallurgy. As a mythic paradigm of ideal
masculine behaviour, Cellini’s sculpture is a rich source for understanding
broader issues relating to contemporary matters concerning identity, gender and
sexuality, such as power dynamics and behavioural codes. Upon Cellini’s death,
twenty-five years after its execution, this almost completed statue was one of
three works found in his workshop, along with his sculptures of Ganymede and
Narcissus.[13] In
his Vita the artist reveals that the marble block was assigned to him by
Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici (1537-69) after a public altercation with his rival
Baccio Bandinelli (1493-1560), but there is no extant contractual evidence to
substantiate it as a firm commission. All we know is that under command from
Cosimo, Bandinelli was commanded to give up the marble after accusing Cellini
of being ‘a dirty sodomite’ (Cellini, 1995:
338).
Cellini’s masculinity is expressed in
his art and it is also known from his Vita that he did not have an
exclusive preference for women. The sexual horizon against which Cellini
himself moved is personified in the way his writings are permeated with violent
boasting and transgressive behaviour, including celebration of the joys and omnipresence
of sodomy. One likely reason that Apollo and Hyacinth remained in
Cellini’s possession without a purchase from Cosimo, is the artist’s conviction
for sodomy in 1557. One important indicator of the personal significance Apollo
and Hyacinth held for Cellini, which has been previously disregarded in
published commentaries on the group, is its mention in a sonnet he wrote whilst
in prison for this offence:
Oh Phoebus, you know well that the first art did that which
all agree is healthiest, for reciprocal love is a human thing, and it
distribute seven sweeter virtues. Your fleeing Daphne unhappily shares the
never healing wound with your beautiful Hyacinth, she who, for great error,
keeps to herself, away from all, and who shares her flowers and fronds with
many people.
Worry no longer over who she may give such things, for you
have given away the arrows the bow and the lyre; nor do you want anyone to
steal them from you. Those little boys are sour and harsh to me, for they,
along with time, have drained me of my strength; my third flame is in this
great dark dwelling place. (Cellini, 1995:
338)
It is my contention that, given his
personal erotic propenstities, Cellini might have used the pederastic Ovidian
mythological narrative of Apollo’s doomed love for Hyacinth, with all its
analogies of prowess and pathos, to make implicit claims about the importance
he placed on male sexual relationships in his own life. But Cellini’s statue
should not be seen solely as an illustration or reflection of a text or a textual
tradition because it offers insights into the broader workings of Renaissance
Florence, as well as its male culture of public and private, fraternal, filial
and sexual affections that drew men together and determined their political
culture.
Examination of the compositional
intricacies at play within Apollo and Hyacinth indicate that the work
seems to possess a broad but specific range of prescriptive behaviours,
fundamental to both the social and sexual situations of an age when manliness
and honour were inextricably enmeshed with social identity and public
reputation. Cellini uses figural stasis and compositional dynamism in the
manner he appropriates and modulates the basic contrapposto pose of Apollo who adopts a dominant stance over the
acquiescent Hyacinth kneeling in subjugation at his feet. The juvenile boy
Hyacinth is almost rooted to the ground in subordination to his mentor and
lover, thereby visually informing and communicating recognised cultural parameters
and norms relating to old / young, active / passive,
masculine / feminine and master / servant roles.
Figure 6. Hyacinth kneeling, detail of Apollo
and Hyacinth.
By bringing to the fore the
performative aspect of the work, Cellini positions the kneeling Hyacinth behind
rather than in front, or even at the side of his master and mentor, in a manner
that consciously affirms dominant gender constructs and power dynamics. Apollo
and Hyacinth invokes the notion that far from being a mutual experience,
sexual activity always had a directional quality for males from both antiquity
and the Italian Renaissance. In doing so, he captures a difference in emotions
between Apollo and Hyacinth, which recalls those that Xenophon records in his Symposium:
‘the boy does not share in a man’s pleasure in intercourse; cold sober, he
looks upon the other drunk with sexual desire’ (Xenophon, Symposium, 8.21, cited in Dover, 1978: 52). Cellini
reiterates this when, in contrast to the developed physique of the adult Apollo
who stares straight ahead, he presents a kneeling pre-pubescent Hyacinth as a
passive, reluctant, unaroused youth who is granted favour without any sign of
sexual delectation whilst gazing adoringly up at his mentor and lover.
These possibilities are bound up with
Ovid’s story of Apollo and Hyacinth, as well as the sociological
prevalence of sodomy that Rocke’s findings uphold. Such signifying elements
lend support to the premise that Hyacinth’s life ends as a juvenile at this
moment and he awaits not literal metamorphosis into a flower, but his accession
to adulthood. I suggest that the youth’s death should be understood in terms of
an archetypal rite of passage since it does not symbolise a real, biological
death, but rather it expresses the death of his adolescence. It is possible
that Cellini alludes to this proposition when he poses Apollo as if turning
away from his beloved in a manner that suggests that because Hyacinth is now
transforming from his being as an adolescent into an adult, it is time to take
his leave. Therefore, we might read Cellini’s depiction of heroism, death and
pathos as capturing ritualized male love and honouring the intrinsic
significance of same-sex relationships with the visual validation that a love
directed at members of one’s own sex is true of the gods as well.
Cellini was operating at a time when
principal interest in pederasty was viewed as phallic confirmation of the socio-political
supremacy of adult citizen males, with each partner taking, expected to take,
and wishing to be perceived as taking a prescribed role. Therefore, we can
suppose that he recognized the need to render Apollo and Hyacinth in a
manner which spoke to the question of those dominant definitions of an active /
passive binary. We can glean how much weight the artist gave to this
association in the manner in which he renders Hyacinth as the construction and
reaffirmation of passivity since he is portrayed as the penetrable and
powerless partner whilst Apollo is the male embodiment of virile power in his
role as the active, impenetrable and powerful older agent. Cellini celebrates
an intensely erotic relationship between Apollo and Hyacinth and thus
sets Florentine political sentiments of power and hegemony within an amorous
and allegorical register. Nevertheless, the group conveys a codified message
that tolerance of erotic activity between men depended on whether expression of
these relations violated culturally defined and accepted conventions.
Figure 7. Apollo and Hyacinth
(Rear view). Marble, Museo Nazionale del
Bargello, Florence.
One of the most homoerotic signifiers
in Cellini’s composition must surely be the way the artist anticipates an act
of oral gratification when he poses Hyacinth with sensuously parted lips knelt
at Apollo’s feet with his head closely aligned as if turning towards the older
agent’s groin. The homoerotic character of the group is further augmented in
the way that Hyacinth strokes Apollo’s buttocks with his right finger. The same
hand grasps a phallic shaped object, perhaps a branch to signify his forthcoming
metamorphosis, in a manner that suggests a masturbatory act. At a cursory
glance, the gesture of Apollo’s hand on the youth’s head might be viewed as an
innocent token of affection. But such a reductive interpretation only holds
currency if one reads the subject out of its literary context of homoerotic
love, obfuscates Cellini’s own male sexual impulses and disregards the social
and sexual taxonomies revealed in contemporary textual and prosecutorial
records. This interrogation of Apollo and Hyacinth has placed the sculpture in
relation to the erotic and social milieu that appears to underlay its
execution. Moreover, by offering a more comprehensive interpretation of this
work we can now situate this depiction of erotic love between a man and a youth
within the contexts of public discourses of prevalent contemporary Renaissance
sexual activity and its creator’s personal libidinal predilections.
Apollo and
Cyparissus by Giulio
Romano (c.1523–27)
Figure 8. Giulio Romano, Apollo
and Cyparissus, c.1523–27. Pen and ink with wash, National Museum,
Stockholm.
Giulio Romano’s drawing of Apollo
and Cyparissus is also distinctively grounded in amorous discourse between
an older active agent and his adolescent beloved. Congruent with Cellini’s Apollo
and Hyacinth, Romano’s Apollo and Cyparissus remains consistent with
the perception of adult males from the higher classes and their position at the
apex of a hierarchical social system that privileged patriarchy, age and power.
Further examination will explore the extent to which the drawing is congruent
with Rocke’s statement that: ‘intimately related to such concerns about
demarcating biological and social stages in life was an equally strong
preoccupation about clarifying and reinforcing gender boundaries’ (Milner, 2005: 64). It will also
consider how representations of pederastic relationships could assume various
forms during the Renaissance depending on the medium in which they appeared.
This drawing has a contrasting conceptual visualisation and physical execution
to Cellini’s sculpture of Apollo and Hyacinth. It also exemplifies how
there were different iconic ambits in the Renaissance—one private, the other
public, and illustrates the extent to which homoerotically charged imagery
assumed different faces for private and public consumption.
Whereas the intended audience for
Cellini’s marble Apollo and Hyacinth would most likely have been diverse
and fairly open, Romano’s drawing would have been distributed on a private
circuit, which was circumscribed and socially elevated. This depiction of male
same-sex erotic impulse, albeit in a different medium, equally corresponds with
the contemporary stereotypes of masculinity and femininity that took place in
the patriarchal society of Renaissance Italy. In Apollo and Cyparissus we find an example of the way in
which homoerotic subject matter held a sensual appeal for many patrons from the
sophisticated, cultivated ranks of the humanist elite at this time.[14]
However, in order to be considered sufficiently decorous by erudite humanists,
rather than irredeemably offensive, a veneer of respectability was needed to be
conferred through an obvious and recognisable mythological subject. The
classical excursus used in this drawing was particularly important because, by
virtue of its transgressive subject and medium, there was the potential for it
to become widely disseminated. Consequently, the visibility and identification
of homoerotic elements at play in this drawing are heavily veiled in
mythological narrative. As Ruggiero explains, erotica in art became less
troublesome for the elite if it was endowed with a humanist complexion:
Printmakers adopted themes from antiquity which allowed
them to represent naked bodies in suggestive poses with a veneer of
intellectual respectability. In a pagan context, nudity, eroticism and the
sexual act itself became less troublesome and somehow more erudite - humanism
made lust an intellectual exercise. (Ruggiero,
2010: 5)
In the context of homoerotic imagery
it seems that these common practices of engendering sex scenes with mythology
were regarded as necessity rather than choice. Romano’s drawing of male
intergenerational love acknowledges this requirement to veil the homoeroticism
in the humanistic gloss of the mythological narrative in a similar way to
Cellini’s Apollo and Hyacinth. Closer examination of Romano’s Apollo
and Cyparissus will enable placement of this image at the intersection of
modes of Renaissance thought where myth and sexual desire for other males were
considerations that were likewise mapped together in art.
In similarity to Cellini’s sculpture,
Romano’s drawing is based on Ovid’s narrative poem Metamorphoses, but
the literary presentation of this myth, on this occasion, has the younger agent
transforming into a cypress tree rather than a flowering plant. Seeming to take
the moment when Apollo grants Cyparissus his wish to grieve forever for his
beloved stag, and just before his transformation into another life form, Romano
depicts Apollo fondly, and perhaps passionately, kissing the adolescent
juvenile Cyparissus on the lips whilst fondling his genitals. Gift giving was a
pervasive principle and practice between male lovers and their beloveds in
ancient Greek society, and one that was manifested in nearly all aspects of
life (Dover, 1978: 82–83).
Figure 9. Cyparissus grasping bow, detail of Apollo
and Cyparissus.
In this instance, I believe Apollo’s
gift of a stag for the adolescent Cyparissus can be understood allegorically as
the god’s recognition that his young lover is approaching maturity and ready
for adulthood. In a way that deviates from the Ovidian story, Romano depicts
the younger Cyparissus holding in his left hand not a javelin but an archer’s
bow as the weapon which fatally wounded his beloved stag. Hunting was a common
metaphor for sexual prowess in both Greek and Renaissance cultures where the
symbolic significance of shooting a bow and arrow had resonance with
ejaculation and vital sexual energy.[15]
As Dover states: ‘If the quarry is human and the object copulation, the
difficulty of the chase enhances the value of the object, and eventual capture,
after fierce competition with rival hunters, is incalculably reassuring to
himself’ (Dover, 1978: 88). In Greek
culture, the hunt was more than just an abstract concept. It was among the
activities in which young men participated as they were initiated into the
civic life of the city (Barringer, 2002:
312–70). The notion that the once hunted Cyparissus, who now holds the bow
and is about to become the hunter himself is, to my mind, further indication
that Romano is departing here from Ovid’s story of his metamorphosis into a
tree and instead visually rendering the myth as an allegory of transition into
adulthood. Furthermore Romano encodes the image with patriarchal power and
categories of masculine virtue in the manner he juxtaposes the naked, idealised
beauty of Cyparissus engaged in a sexually suggestive coupling with his
paramour Apollo against the formless drapery that envelops the isolated clothed
female figure. In accordance with prescribed contemporary gender roles this
woman is, and will remain, ostracized from both the physical and spiritual
facets of male relationships, regardless of their carnal intent.
The juxtaposition is further
developed in the way a large bowed stringed musical instrument is positioned
precariously leaning against the rock. Interestingly, Romano includes a
contemporary instrument rather than Apollo’s trademark ancient lyre.[16] Its
shape is strongly suggestive of feminine characteristics but, significantly, it
is presently left neglected by the juvenile Cyparissus. Romano renders his
female voyeur devoid of luscious, glorious fleshiness in a manner which eschews
the objectifying logic of male gazing and female passivity, but includes
instead an instrument which replicates the graceful curves of an idealised
womanly form. Romano’s placement of both the abandoned stringed instrument and
its forsaken musical bow sharply contrasts with the way an erect weapon is
grasped in Cyparissus’ hand. This emphasis on the male protagonist’s erotic
activity could be read as a euphemism for neglecting the act of touching,
cradling, handling, playing, and caressing the female body in order to emit the
desired sounds. In addition, the instrument’s neck terminates with a carving of
a serpent’s head in a way that could be understood as a symbolic allusion to
female temptation. This reference to Eve’s temptation of Adam in the Garden of
Eden finds a parallel in the pastoral setting of Apollo and Cyparissus and
is emblematic of a potential threat to masculine virtue by succumbing to female
sexual desire.[17]
Romano seems to be suggesting that the woman, playing the part of temptress,
could prematurely distract their attention away from the serious business of
pederastic pedagogy.
Figure 10. Female voyeur with finger
in mouth, detail of Apollo and Cyparissus.
This inclusion of a female voyeur
within his composition is one of the most extraordinary features of Romano’s Apollo
and Cyparissus. Placing a woman voyeur in the same pictorial field is
perhaps also forewarning that to cede phallic pleasure to a woman threatens
socio-political status since, as G. Servadio’s research into Renaissance
womanhood explains, sexual desire in women was considered to be a risk to the
self-control so central to the conception of masculine virtue.[18] In
this manner, Romano appears to make similar implicit claims about the
importance of sexual and social roles in the period to those Rocke makes from
his research of the judicial archives. As Rocke states, a grown man who
exhibited passivity would induce such a contemptuous reaction and be deemed to
have behaved so inappropriately that he would be severely penalised ‘because it
was considered unacceptable masculine behaviour that challenged and threatened
to defame the virility not only of the offender himself but of the entire male
community’ (Milner, 2005: 64). It
can be contended, therefore, that this female figure who observes their
libidinous union serves to reiterate the expectation that the juvenile
Cyparissus would soon be assuming the active role of lover and husband. Just as the main protagonists are men
behaving in accordance within codified gender expectations for masculinity, the
female also conforms to expected gender roles by silently observing male
interaction without intervention in a manner that would have mirrored expected
behavioural comportment from an obedient prospective wife.
The manner in which this woman voyeur
inserts a finger in her own mouth carries a further analogous meaning that
expounds on the sexual theme of the narrative. I would argue that the existence
of the female voyeur seems far more nuanced than a gesture of puzzlement or
dismay and is more likely to be read as the woman’s anticipation of her
forthcoming role as the administrator of pleasure for her soon to be adult and
marriageable suitor. As if to emphasise that passivity was only acceptable at a
certain stage in a man’s life, the attendance of this woman together with the
phallic symbolism of the temporarily abandoned bow that Romano prominently
places in the centre foreground evokes a certain reassurance that once metamorphosis
into adulthood as an active procreative being is complete, Cyparissus will
return his attention to this more ‘natural’ form in order to fulfil his own
patriarchal and pedagogical obligations. Despite its strong homoerotic
overtones, within Romano’s drawing a coherent, if complex, picture emerges
where it seems that once his metamorphosis is complete, Cyparissus, in line
with all juveniles expected to take up their place as erstwhile citizens, will
soon marry and sire offspring as a civic and familial duty. I believe that the
pederasty we see depicted in Apollo and Cyparissus substantiates the information Rocke
has gleaned from the detailed magisterial records where a picture emerges of
pederasty as a common but transient phase in an adolescent’s life before taking
a wife (Rocke, 1996: 14).
Conclusion
Past discourse on the Italian
Renaissance has been less than alert to the connection between the predication
of masculinity in the visual field of male same-sex erotic behaviour and the
subject has often been readily overlooked by those who prefer to study the more
traditional and canonical aspects of its art and society. Mindful of the fact
that no text, visual or written, is comprehensible without a close
consideration of contemporary interest and practices, this article has
attempted to redress this neglect by adopting a more comprehensive approach to
the subject of pederasty in the visual domain of the Italian Renaissance.
In order to situate these case
studies within the historical and sexual specificity of their period, it has
been necessary to re-evaluate a variety of previously under-theorised factors
that might have brought Apollo and Hyacinth and Apollo and Cyparissus
into being. In the case of Cellini, a new association has been made between
this sculpture and the artist’s sexual life. Most significantly, this study has
aimed to elucidate the ways in which these artworks bear directly on the matter
of codified expectations for manly sexual, gender, social and cultural
deportment and concluded that there is a correlation between these artworks,
their mythological texts and the social circumstances revealed in the official
records.
APPENDIX I:
No more has he thought for zither or
for bow. Entirely heedless of his usual pursuits, he refuses not to bear the
nets nor hold the dogs in leash, nor go as comrade along the rough mountain
ridges. And so with long association he feeds his passion’s flame. And now
Titan was about midway ‘twixt the coming and the banished night, standing at
equal distance from both extremes; they strip themselves and, gleaming with
rich olive oil, they try a contest with the broad discus. This well poised
Phoebus [Apollo] sent flying through the air and cleft the opposite clouds with
the heavy iron. Down again to the solid earth after long time it fell,
revealing the hurler’s skill and strength combined. Straight away the Taenarian
youth, heedless of danger and moved by eagerness for the game, ran out to take
up the discus. But the hard earth, returning the flow, hurled it back up full
in your face, O Hyacinthus.
The god grows deadly pale even as the
boy, and catches up the huddled form; now he seeks to warm you again, now tries
to staunch your dreadful wound, now strives to stay your parting soul with
healing herbs. But his arts are of no avail; the wound is past all cure… ‘Thou
art fallen, defrauded of thy youth’s prime,’ says Phoebus, ‘and in thy wound do
I see my guilt; thou art my cause of grief and self-reproach; my hand must be
proclaimed the cause of thy destruction. I am author of thy death. And yet,
what is my fault, unless my playing with thee can be called a fault, unless my
loving thee can be called a fault? And oh that I might meet death together with
thee and might with thee give up my life!
But since we are held from this by
the laws of fate, though shalt be always with me, and shall stay mindful on my
lips. Thee shall my lyre, struck by my hand, thee shall my songs proclaim. And
as a new flower, by thy markings shalt thou imitate my groans. Also the time
will come when a most valiant hero shall be linked with this flower, and by the
same markings shall he be known’. While Apollo thus spoke with truth-telling
lips, behold, the blood which had poured out on the ground and stained the
grass, ceased to be blood, and in its place there sprang a flower, brighter
than the Tyrian dye. It took the form of the lily, save that it was the one
which was of purple hue, while the other was silvery white. Phoebus, not
satisfied with this – for ’twas he who wrought the honouring miracle – himself
inscribed his grieving words upon the leaves, and the flower bore the marks, AI
AI, letters of lamentation, drawn thereon.
(Ovid,
Metamorphoses, Book X, lines 170–215, 1977: 77–9)[19]
APPENDIX II:
Amidst this throng came the
cone-shaped cypress, now a tree but once a boy, beloved by that god who strings
the lyre and strings the bow. For there was a mighty stag, sacred to the nymphs
who haunt the Carthaean plains, whose wide spreading antlers gave ample shade
to his own head… It was high noon on a summer’s day when the spreading claws of
the shore-loving Crab were burning with the sun’s hot rays. Weary, the stag had
laid down upon the grassy earth and was drinking in the coolness of the forest
shade. Him, all unwittingly, the boy Cyparissus, pierced with a sharp javelin,
and when he saw him dying of the cruel wound, he resolved on death himself.
What did not Phoebus say to comfort him! How he warned him to grieve in
moderation and consistently with the occasion! The lad only groaned and begged
this as the boon he most desired from heaven, that he might mourn forever. And
now, as his life forces were exhausted by endless weeping, his limbs began to
change to a green colour, and his locks, which but now overhung his snowy brow,
were turned to a bristling crest, and he became a stiff tree with slender top
looking to the starry heavens. The god groaned and, full of sadness said: ‘You
shall be mourned by me, shall mourn for others, and your place shall always be
where others grieve’…he raised his voice in this song: ‘From Jove, O Muse, my
mother-for all things yield to the sway of Jove- inspire my song! Oft I have
sung of the power of Jove before: I have sung the giants in a heavier strain,
and the victorious bolts hurled on the Phlegraean plains. But now I need the
gentler touch, for I sing of boys beloved by gods, and maidens inflamed by
unnatural love and paying the penalty of their lust.
(Ovid,
Metamorphoses, Book X, 1977, lines 81–154: 71–75)
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To cite this article:
Haughton, A. (2015), ‘Myths of Male Same-Sex Love in the Art
of the Italian Renaissance’, Exchanges:
The Warwick Research Journal, 3(1), 65–95. Retrieved from: http://exchanges.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/exchanges/article/view/80
[1]The Oxford English Dictionary defines
pederasty as ‘homosexual relations between a man and boy: homosexual anal
intercourse, usually with a boy or younger man as the passive partner’.
However, the Encyclopaedia of
Homosexuality offers a more accurate definition: ‘Pederasty is the erotic
relationship between an adult male and a boy, generally one between the ages of
twelve and seventeen, in which the older partner is attracted to the younger
one who returns his affection, whether or not the liaison leads to overt sexual
contact’ (http://www.williamapercy.com/wiki/index.php/).
[2] For information
on the fundamental mores and social configurations of same-sex erotic relations in these cultures see Dover, 1978: 81–109; Williams, 1999:
17–19;
and Rocke, 1996: 87–101.
[3] The singularly
most informative and pioneering study of the theme of homoerotic art using
mythological subject matter largely limited to the Ganymede topos is Saslow’s Ganymede in the Renaissance: Homosexuality in Art and Society (1986).
[4] For an informative account of the reception of mythology in the Italian Renaissance, see Bull, 2005: 7–36; and Barkan,
1991: 10–18.
[5] The most influential text
for dissemination of mythography in the Renaissance was Giovanni Boccaccio,
Genealogia Deorum Gentilium (On the Genealogy of the Gods of the Gentiles), 1360 revised up
to 1374. Other
versions to appear in the
sixteenth century were Lilio Gregorio Giraldi, De
deis gentium varia et multiplex historia in
qua
simul de eorum imaginibus et cognominibus agitur (On the History of Pagan Gods in Which Their Images
and
Cognates Are Dealt with), Basel, 1548; Natale
Conti, Mythologiae sive explicationis fabularum libri decem
(On Mythology or on the Explanation of Fables), Venice, 1551; Vincenzo Cartari, Le imagini colla sposizione degli dei degli antichi (The Images with Explanations of the Gods of the Ancients), Venice, 1556
[6] Useful examples
of feminist approaches to gender in art history include Pollock, 1988;
Bartkey, 1991.
The relationship between mythology and the erotic in a heterosexual context is
the focus of Talvacchia, 1991.
[7] In addition to
Rocke’s research, an account of sodomy in the Italian Renaissance can be located in Finucci, 2003: 249–50; Dinshaw, 1999: 55–79; O’Donnell and O’Rourke, 2002: 99–103.
[8] For a
definition of the role of ancient Greek gods, see Bremmer and Erskine, 2010: 19–80.
[9] One of the rare
tales of love between gods is that of Aphrodite and Ares in Homer, The Odyssey, Book VIII, (Hom. Od.
8.250)
[10] The love of
young men was a common characteristic of gods in Greek and Roman mythology and
it offered a rich field that encompassed not just Apollo and Hyacinth and
Apollo and Cyparissus but also Zeus and Ganymede, Achilles and Patrocolus,
Orpheus (who turned his passionate attentions to young men after spurning women
following the death of Eurydice), Narcissus who rejected Echo in favour of his
own, superior beauty, and Salmacis and Hermaphroditus.
[11] The standard monograph of Cellini remains J.
Pope-Hennessy
Cellini, 1985 which
integrates
a discussion of a variety
of textual sources
with the artist’s surviving
works. This author’s approach to Apollo and Hyacinth
has much to commend
it since he provides a full
description of
the work together with an
informative
account of Cellini’s tumultuous life. Absent from this otherwise comprehensive study,
however, is any discussion of the homoerotic allure of both the sculpture and
the
Ovidian source of its
subject. One of the most recent and inquiring studies of Cellini’s oeuvre is
Michael Cole’s
Cellini
and the Principles of Sculpture,
2005. However, this author’s observations on Apollo and Hyacinth
are largely limited
to Cellini’s occupational
circumstances and
professional trajectory (Pope-Hennessy, 1985: 83–85).
[12] For an anthropological survey of initiation ceremonies and
rites of passage, see Gennup, 1960: 1–14.
[13] The fact that
Cellini references beautiful youths from Ovid's Narcissus and Ganymede myths
for these two sculptures confirms his interest in the Metamorphoses.
[14] There has been
only scant scholarly reference to this drawing in past historiography of the artist. Apollo
and Cyparissus was included in the 2009 exhibition ‘Art and Love in Renaissance Italy’ at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and there
is short description in the exhibition catalogue, see
Wolk-Smith, 2009:
190. For the provenance of the
drawing see Hartt, 1958: 252, however, this author omits discussion of the erotic aspect of the
drawing. See Talvacchia, 1999: 71–79 for a brief comparison with the
artist’s heterosexual I Modi
drawings.
[15] For a
discussion on youths as quarry and the analogy between hunting and pederasty,
see Dover, 1978: 86–89. For a detailed account of phallic symbolism and the sexual association of weaponry during the Renaissance, see Simons, 2011: 112–22.
Also, Gurven, 2009:
51–73.
[16] This musical instrument resembling a cello
is likely to
be
bass viol da
gamba which first
appeared in the
early Renaissance. For an account of the history and use of this instrument, see Woodfield and Brown, 1984.
[17] Genesis 3:13.
Renaissance anxieties about the lure of women is discussed in Wolfhal, 2010: 23–31. See also Martines, 1974: 15–28.
[18] For an account of Renaissance womanhood and contemporary expectations for feminine decorum, see Servadio, 2005:
1–21.
[19] This paper uses
excerpts from the Loeb translated version of Ovid’s epic poem to support its
central argumentations