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Venus de' Medici, lifesize apparently unsigned white marble 63 in. (160 cm.) high; 18 in. (45.5 cm.) wide; 17 ? in. (44.5 cm.) deep Circa 1900.
Although first documented in 1638, when she was recorded in a book of engravings of the most beautiful antique statues in Rome, the Venus was almost certainly known in the 16th century. Today some scholars believe that the marble is a first century B.C. copy of of an earlier bronze. (Haskell and Penny, Taste and the Antique, New Haven, 1981, pp. 326-328)
Originally housed in the Villa Medici, the marble was transferred to Florence in 1677, and by 1688 had taken pride of place in the Tribuna of the Uffizi. When Napoleon's armies were threatening Italy, it was among the treasures moved to the south of Italy for safe keeping, but it was eventually claimed by the French and was shipped to Paris where it remained between 1803 and 1815. After Napoleon's defeat, it was returned to the Tribuna of the Uffizi in Florence, where it remains today.