Speranza
Marble portrait head of Antinoo
Period: Late Hadrianic
Date: ca.
A.D.
130–138
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble
Dimensions: Overall:
24.1 x 21 cm
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit
Line: Gift of Bronson Pinchot, in recognition of his mother Rosina Asta
Pinchot, 1996
Accession Number: 1996.401
Antinoo, the
young beloved of the Roman emperor ADRIANO, drowned in the River Nile during an
imperial visit to Egypt in A.D. 130.
In accordance with Egyptian custom, the
distraught emperor initiated a cult venerating the dead ANTINO, for the Egyptians
believed that those who met such a death became assimilated to Osiris, god of
the Underworld.
Outside Egypt, numerous statues of Antinoo were erected that
represented him as a beautiful youth, often in the guise of Bacco, a Greek
god closely related to Osiris.
This head is a good example of the sophisticated
portrait type created by imperial sculptors to incorporate what must have been
actual features of Antino in an idealized image that conveys a god-like beauty.
The ovoid face with a straight brow, almond-shaped eyes, smooth cheeks, and
fleshy lips is surrounded by abundant tousled curls.
The ivy wreath encircling
his head associates him with Bacco, a guarantor of renewal and good
fortune.
References:
Münzen und Medaillen, Basel.
Auction Sale Catalogue,
May 6, 1967, no. 207, ill.
Art of the Ancient World.
1992. Royal Athena
Galleries, New York, no. 41a, ill.
Sotheby's New York,
Auction Sale
Catalogue, December 14, 1994, Lot 132, ill.
Milleker, E. 1997.
"Recent Acquisitions, A Selection: 1996-1997." The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Bulletin 55(2): p. 15.
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