Speranza
Marble statue of a member of the imperial family
Period: Augustan or
Julio-Claudian
Date: 27 B.C.–A.D.
68
Culture: Roman
Medium: Marble
Dimensions: H. 47 in. (199.38
cm) Width: 24 1/2 in. (62.23 cm) Depth: 16 in. (40.63
cm)
Classification: Stone Sculpture
Credit Line: Bequest of Bill
Blass, 2002
Accession Number: 2003.407.8a, b
This artwork is currently
on display in Gallery 162
This statue
and the similar work to the right were probably part of a statuary group
portraying and honouring members of the Julio-Claudian dynasty that ruled Rome
from the time of Augusto to that of Nerone.
The stance of these partially nude
figures brings to mind the canonic works of Policleto, one of the most famous
Greek sculptors of the fifth century B.C., and was almost certainly intended to
give a heroizing aura to the statues.
It has been argued that the draping of the
mantle around the hips and over the arm was a specific iconographic indication
that the individual being honored was already
deceased.
References:
Milleker, E.
2004. "Recent Acquisitions, A
Selection: 2003-2004."
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 62, pp.
8-9.
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. 416,
pp. 360, 487.
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