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Carl Blochās lost masterpiece Prometheus Unbound finds fame again in Athens
Work that made its creator a superstar then mysteriously disappeared is mesmerising art lovers once more
It was commissioned in 1864, by King George I of Greece, made its creator a superstar and in his native Denmark attracted crowds like no other painting before. Then it mysteriously disappeared.
Now, nearly nine decades after it was last seen gracing the stairwell of the royal palace that would become the Athens parliament, Carl Blochās masterpiece, Prometheus Unbound, has found fame again inĀ Greece.
āIts appeal has been astounding,ā said Nikolas Papadimitriou, the director of the Paul and Alexandra Canellopoulos Museum beneath the Acropolis. āPeople stand before it transfixed. Theyāre completely mesmerised.ā
On public display for the first time in the country, the painting has for months been attracting visitors who are spurred as much by the prospect of seeing a long-lost cultural treasure as hunger, perhaps, for a glimpse of freedomās victory over oppression.
The paintingās popularity has been such that plans are now afoot to exhibit it elsewhere in Greece before the culture ministry, which has declared the work a protected monument, puts it on permanent display at the newly restored palace of Tatoi, north of the capital, later this year.

āAt the age of 87 I donāt think Iāve seen anything like it,ā said Dimitris Mavrikas, a retired merchant who had travelled from Agrinio in central Greece to see the work. āFor me itās all about the battle of human existence, the battle we wage to survive from the moment we are born.ā
In an increasingly insecure world, it was, he said, a battle freighted with significance. āWho can dispute the fact that people have always been fighting for their liberty?ā he said. āIād heard so much about this painting and it hasnāt let me down. It provokes awe.ā
At four meters high and three meters wide, the magisterial piece depicts the moment Prometheus breaks free from the chains that have bound him to a rock, the punishment Zeus has bestowed on the titan for daring to gift mankind the power of fire.
Condemned to have his liver pecked by an eagle in perpetuity ā with the king god ensuring the organ is constantly renewed for the bird to feast on ā Bloch evokes the drama of Prometheusās liberation after Heraclesā unexpected intervention. He looks on incredulously as his tormentor falls from his body.
Papadimitriou said the paintingās allure could also be attributed to āits sheer size, in a country where weāve never had big buildings to hang such piecesā.
Schoolchildren have visited the museum to take in the floor-to-ceiling treasure āand the reaction was always the sameā, he said. āThey stood there in silence, in total amazement.ā
Known for his depictions of mythological heroes, Bloch was commissioned in 1864 by the young Danish-born king George I, who had assumed Greeceās throne the year before. Ensconced in his studio in Rome as revolutionary fervour spread, the artist worked furiously to finish the painting. When it was first exhibited in Copenhagen in 1865, Prometheus Unbound was hailed as groundbreaking and an unprecedented success.
āIt would be right to say that it would be difficult to find its equal anywhere since the very beginnings of Danish art,ā one critic opined.
But, for many, the power of the painting also lies in its extraordinary history. Its chance rediscovery in 2012 not only ended decades of speculation but resolved a thriller that had long haunted the art world.

Culture ministry officials in Greece were stunned when they came across the canvas rolled up in a tube while recording thousands of objects amassed in Tatoi from estates that had once belonged to the nationās deposed royal family.
Last seen publicly at an exhibition in Copenhagen in 1932, historians surmised it had either been lost as it was transported by ship back to Greece or had fallen victim to fire. That looters had failed to spot the treasure ā the royal estates had been frequently targeted by thieves ā only added to the astonishment.
āIt needed work,ā said Melina Fotopoulou, the Greek culture ministry conservationist who oversaw its restoration. āIn places there was mould, cracks and colour detachment that required restoration and as it had been rolled up for so long in the cylinder, the canvas was quite loose.ā
The painstaking conservation work was made harder because of the paintingās size. āIt was impossible to restore mounted on a frame and so was laid out on the ground where we worked on it intensely,ā Fotopoulou said, adding there had been āquite a bit of nervousnessā before the masterpiece was rehung. āWe werenāt at all sure what it would look like framed but of course it is so impressive; itās wonderful.ā
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Clay āMelian reliefā representing the meeting of Electra and Orestes
470-460 BC
Clay
H. 22 cm
Collection Number Ī 2122
Paul and Alexandra Canellopoulos Museum
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