Apollo and Daphne was the last of a number of important works commissioned by
Cardinal Scipione Borghese from
Gian Lorenzo Bernini that helped to define Baroque sculpture. Thereafter, Bernini served a succession of popes.
Apollo and Daphne was commissioned after Borghese had given an important work of his patronage, Bernini's
The Rape of Proserpina (1621–22), to Cardinal
Ludovico Ludovisi. Through this generous gesture, Borghese hoped to ingratiate himself to the favored nephew of the new pope, Gregory XV. Much of the early work on
Apollo and Daphne was done in 1622–23, but
Bernini's work on his
sculpture of David (1623–24) interrupted its completion. Bernini finished
Apollo and Daphne in 1625, and it was moved to the Cardinal's Villa Borghese in September of that year. Bernini did not execute the sculpture entirely by his own hand. As was the common practice at that time, he had help from his workshop.
Giuliano Finelli, who was a very gifted sculptor, undertook the finer details that show Daphne's conversion from human to tree, such as the twigs and leafs springing from her hands, and her windswept hair. Some art historians, however, discount the importance of Finelli's contribution, since he was merely realizing Bernini's creative vision.
Apollo and Daphne's enthusiastic reception began as soon as the work was unveiled. ==Description==