Portrait of a Bearded Man, A.D. 200-220. Additional Info: Private individuals in the Roman period frequently modeled portraits of themselves on those of the reigning emperor. Carved in the mid-100s, this portrait of a middle-aged man borrows several elements from the official portraits of the ruling emperor of this period Antoninus Pius: tousled hair; short beard, deep-set eyes, furrowed brow, and lined cheeks. Portraiture in the Antonine dynasty begins to move away from the ageless, classicizing portraits favored by previous rulers. The technique of carving the eyes with an incised iris and drilled crescent-shaped pupils gives a new intensity to the gaze of Antonine portraits. It is also during this period that it became standard for ordinary people, not just philosophers and intellectuals, to wear beards.
Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 4062x4960
File Size : 59,026kb