Speranza
Marble portrait of the co-emperor Lucius Verus
Period: Mid-Imperial,
Antonine
Date: A.D.
161–169
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble
Dimensions: H. 36.8 cm
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit Line: Rogers
Fund, 1913
Accession Number: 1913.227.1
This artwork is currently on
display in Gallery 162
This fragmentary
head comes from an over-life-sized portrait bust or statue of Lucius Verus,
co-emperor with Marcus Aurelius (r. A.D. 161–180). At the beginning of his
reign, Verus was sent to the East to direct military operations against the
Parthians, and although the war was concluded successfully in A.D. 166, his
returning troops brought back the plague, which ravaged the Empire for several
years thereafter. He is compared unfavorably with Marcus Aurelius by the ancient
sources, but the portrait shown here has a leonine majesty that gives little
indication of his reputation as an idle and dissolute ruler. It is typical of
Antonine style in its use of luxuriant drillwork in the hair and engraved eyes
to dramatize the basically naturalistic image.
References
Richter, G.
1914. "Department of Classical Art Accessions 1913." Bulletin of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art 9(3): pp. 61-62, fig. 4.
Richter, G.
1930. Handbook of the Classical Collection. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of
Art, pp. 302-3, fig. 212.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1987. Greece
and Rome. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, no. 106, p.
138.
Picon, Carlos A., et al. 2007. Art of the Classical World in The
Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, no. 450,
pp. 385, 494.
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