Portrait Statue of a Woman, about A.D. 120-130. Additional Info: This fragmentary full-length Roman portrait statue depicts a woman wrapped in a mantle. Her smooth, delicate facial features suggest a young woman, or at least a woman carved in an ageless, Classicizing style. Her distinctive hairstyle allows scholars to date this statue to the period from about A.D. 120 to 130. Women throughout the Empire adopted this style with the hair pulled back from the face and the long hair wrapped in braids around the back of the head in imitation of the women of the Imperial family. The woman's somewhat individualized features are added onto a standard body type. In fact, the head was made separately from a finer grained marble and inserted into the carved body. Scholars refer to this body type as a "Small Herculaneum Woman," named after a statue found in Herculaneum.
Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3288x4960
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