Roman head of a bearded god, c.2nd century AD
Marble
Height: 20cm
11787 TA
$ 95,000
Further images
Head of a bearded male, possibly Zeus or Poseidon, but most likely Asclepius, god of medicine, carved from marble with added use of a hand drill. His luxuriant mane of...
Head of a bearded male, possibly Zeus or Poseidon, but most likely Asclepius, god of medicine, carved from marble with added use of a hand drill. His luxuriant mane of hair is arranged in thick, flame-like locks which sweep upwards and off his forehead in layers from a centre parting, and fall around his face in voluted waves. His heavily lidded eyes gaze straight forwards and have incised irises and drilled crescentic pupils. There is a deep crease on his forehead, his nose is straight, and his full, slightly parted lips, are framed by a centrally divided beard of overlapping curls. Broken diagonally across the face with some restoration to the lips, the upper right side of the anastole-like hair restored.
Provenance
Axel G. Weber, Cologne, GermanyPrivate collection, Germany; acquired from the above in 1977