Based on Clodion's original work, this casting was made in the last third of the 19th century, when the Rococo style, in which the sculptor worked, was regaining popularity. The technological capabilities of the new era made it possible to reproduce the bronze originals of the previous century with high quality. The scene depicts a naked young woman, a nymph-bacchante (maenad), sitting astride a horned satyr with goat legs. He is bent under his load, holding the bacchante under her knee with his left hand and leaning with his right hand on a round bronze base, part of the sculptural composition. The woman holds the satyr by the horn with her right hand, and he, satisfied, turns his curly-haired young face to the right. The head of the young woman with loose, wavy hair and a plump face is turned upward to the right, and with her left hand stretched forward, she holds a thyrsus, the staff of Bacchus, entwined with a grapevine. Wavy drapery falls from the bacchante's right shoulder downwards, covering her lap. Drapery also envelops her figure from behind, as well as the satyr's body. Between the satyr's hooves is a tambourine with grapevines. On the base to the left, near the satyr's hand, is an inscription: "Clodion".