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This love’s been there for ever

A plump, naughty looking winged baby with a bow and arrow: sounds like the illustration on a Valentine's Day card, right? Wrong: it's a two-thousand-year-old statue on show in New York.

A new exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, ‘Changing Image of Eros, Ancient Greek God of Love, from Antiquity to Renaissance,’ demonstrates that love as we know it doesn't just last forever - it's been around forever too.

The centerpiece of the exhibit, which opened last week and runs through 23 June, is a remarkable, life size bronze sculpture of Eros shown as a sleeping baby. His chubby legs are draped over a stone. One of his wings lies flat, the details of every feather visible, and the other is tucked up underneath.

Unusually for Greek art, the god's eyes are shut. And in a touching nuance, the baby's mouth rests open, while his left hand lies limp, having dropped his famous bow. ‘He's in the midst of his labors and he's taking a nap,’ curator Sean Hemingway said.

Those labors, according to the Greek myth, were very much as doodling, love-sick teens might imagine them on Tuesday: Eros firing arrows of love.

Less well known is that the Greek Eros had two arrows -- ‘either tipped with gold or tipped with lead,’ Hemingway said.

‘The golden ones gave burning desire and the lead ones,’ he added with a chuckle, ‘repelled people from burning desire.’

The image of Eros captured in the statue, which is dated to the 3rd-2nd centuries BC and comes from the island of Rhodes, spawned a remarkable dynasty of lookalikes, right from Roman art's Cupid to the winged cherubs of Renaissance paintings, and into our popular culture on Tuesday.

But Eros wasn't always so cuddly. Until the period when winged babies came out with their darts of passion, the god was depicted in Archaic Greek poetry as a ‘powerful, often cruel, and capricious being,’ the exhibit explains.

The baby version meant love was ‘brought down to earth and disarmed.’

‘The idea of love is a universal concept,’ said Hemingway, an archaeologist and the grandson of the novelist Ernest Hemingway.
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