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- Gradiva abstract "The Gradiva, The woman who walks, has become a modern 20th century mythological figure. As she has sprung out of the imagination of a fictional character she may be considered unreal twice over. The fictional character in question is a young archaeologist, the protagonist of a novella by the German writer Wilhelm Jensen: Gradiva: Ein pompejanisches Phantasiestück (Delusion and Dream in Jensen's Gradiva 1903). He is fascinated by a female figure in an antique bas-relief and gives her the name ‘Gradiva’ after Mars Gradivus, the Roman god of war walking into battle; later, not quite certain whether he is awake or dreaming he meets her in the ruins of Pompeii.Sigmund Freud famously analysed the actions and dreams of this young archaeologist in his study: Der Wahn und die Träume in W. Jensens Gradiva (1907). Through this study Freud not only saved the novella from being forgotten but caused the Gradiva to become a modern mythical figure.The relief itself is not fictional but exists; it is now known by the name of „Gradiva“. The relief was described by Hauser (1903) as a neo-Attic Roman bas-relief, probably after a Greek original from the 4th century BCE. It shows in its complete state the three Agraulides sisters Herse, Pandrosos und Aglaulos, deities of the dew. Hauser reconstructed the Agraulid-relief from fragments scattered over various museum collections. The Gradiva fragment is held in the collection of the Vatican Museum Chiaramonti, Rome, its complement in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.".
- Gradiva thumbnail Gradiva-p1030638.jpg?width=300.
- Gradiva wikiPageExternalLink MCMs_Sala01_02.html.
- Gradiva wikiPageExternalLink gradiva-the-cure-through-love.
- Gradiva wikiPageExternalLink 67734.
- Gradiva wikiPageExternalLink carasco_gravida.html.
- Gradiva wikiPageID "1530622".
- Gradiva wikiPageLength "5067".
- Gradiva wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- Gradiva wikiPageRevisionID "646730900".
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Aglaulus,_daughter_of_Cecrops.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink André_Breton.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Bas-relief.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Bruno_Nuytten.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Category:4th-century_BC_sculptures.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Category:Neo-Attic_sculptures.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sculptures_of_the_Vatican_Museums.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Delusion_and_Dream_in_Jensens_Gradiva.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Ethnographer.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Ethnography.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Freud_Museum.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Gala_Dalí.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Gradhiva.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Herse.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Left_Bank.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Marcel_Duchamp.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Mars_(mythology).
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Michel_Leiris.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Muse.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Musée_du_quai_Branly.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Neo-Attic.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Pandrosos.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Pandrosus.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Pompeii.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Raymonde_Carasco.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Relief.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Rive_Gauche.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Salvador_Dalí.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Sigmund_Freud.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Surrealism.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Surrealist.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink Uffizi.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLink File:Gradiva-p1030638.jpg.
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gradiva Award".
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gradiva".
- Gradiva wikiPageWikiLinkText "a Roman bas-relief of the same name".
- Gradiva hasPhotoCollection Gradiva.
- Gradiva wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons-inline.
- Gradiva wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Gradiva wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Gradiva wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Gradiva subject Category:4th-century_BC_sculptures.
- Gradiva subject Category:Neo-Attic_sculptures.
- Gradiva subject Category:Sculptures_of_the_Vatican_Museums.
- Gradiva type Article.
- Gradiva type Work.
- Gradiva type Article.
- Gradiva type Collection.
- Gradiva type Work.
- Gradiva comment "The Gradiva, The woman who walks, has become a modern 20th century mythological figure. As she has sprung out of the imagination of a fictional character she may be considered unreal twice over. The fictional character in question is a young archaeologist, the protagonist of a novella by the German writer Wilhelm Jensen: Gradiva: Ein pompejanisches Phantasiestück (Delusion and Dream in Jensen's Gradiva 1903).".
- Gradiva label "Gradiva".
- Gradiva sameAs Gradiva.
- Gradiva sameAs Gradiva.
- Gradiva sameAs グラディーヴァ.
- Gradiva sameAs m.058gcv.
- Gradiva sameAs Gradiva.
- Gradiva sameAs Градива.
- Gradiva sameAs Q1841379.
- Gradiva sameAs Q1841379.
- Gradiva wasDerivedFrom Gradiva?oldid=646730900.
- Gradiva depiction Gradiva-p1030638.jpg.
- Gradiva isPrimaryTopicOf Gradiva.