Marble portrait of Matidia Minor ca. 138–161 Roman This head originally belonged to an honorary portrait statue of Mindia Matidia, or Matidia Minor ( 85–162), half-sister of Sabina, wife of the emperor Hadrian, and aunt of the emperor Antoninus Pius. There exist five other replicas of this portrait type, recognized by a recently discovered statue of Matidia Minor from the Roman theater at Suessa Aurunca, a Campanian town of which she was a major benefactor. As is common with members of the imperial family, she is portrayed with an idealized, youthful face, and styling a complex coiffu
Marble portrait of Matidia Minor ca. 138–161 Roman This head originally belonged to an honorary portrait statue of Mindia Matidia, or Matidia Minor ( 85–162), half-sister of Sabina, wife of the emperor Hadrian, and aunt of the emperor Antoninus Pius. There exist five other replicas of this portrait type, recognized by a recently discovered statue of Matidia Minor from the Roman theater at Suessa Aurunca, a Campanian town of which she was a major benefactor. As is common with members of the imperial family, she is portrayed with an idealized, youthful face, and styling a complex coiffure that includes a hairpiece in the shape of braids coiled on top of her head. Her upward gaze is characteristic of many portraits from the Antonine period Marble portrait of Matidia Minor 251061 Roman, Marble portrait of Matidia Minor, ca. 138?161, Marble, H. 14 3/4 in. ( cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Rogers Fund, 1921 ()
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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
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