Dos estatuas de miembros de la familia imperial

27 BCE–68 CE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 162
Figuras de pie semidesnudas similares a estas aparecen a partir del periodo clásico para representar a los dioses y también como estatuas honoríficas de personajes distinguidos. Es probable que las estatuas semidesnudas aquí ilustradas formaran parte de un grupo escultórico glorificando a miembros de la dinastía Julio-Claudia, que gobernó Roma desde la época de Augusto hasta la de Nerón. Su postura canónica, que recuerda las obras de Policleto, uno de los escultores griegos más famosos del siglo V a. C., sin duda pretendía conferir una aura heroica a los retratados. Las estatuas de miembros de la familia imperial, tanto vivos como muertos, se exponían en grupos en los espacios públicos de la ciudad, como el foro, la basílica o el teatro.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: Dos estatuas de miembros de la familia imperial
  • Periodo: Periodo augustal o julio-claudio
  • Fecha: 27 a. C.–68 d. C.
  • Cultura: Roma
  • Material: Mármol
  • Dimensiones: a. 119,4 cm; a. 116,8 cm
  • Crédito: Legado de Bill Blass, 2002
  • Número de inventario: 2003.407.8a, b
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

Audio

Solo disponible en: English
Cover Image for 2612. Marble statue of a member of the imperial family

2612. Marble statue of a member of the imperial family

Investigations: Art, Conservation, and Science

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NARRATOR This over-life-size carving in marble is part of our Investigations tour. You'll see why when you look at the bands of drapery across the front. Here's Mark Abbe, from The Met’s Department of Scientific Research.

MARK ABBE: And if you look closely at the drapery to your right, if you're facing the front of the statue, you'll see a narrow band of purple on the outer edge of the hanging drapery that's adjacent to the figure's thigh. This band is visible only in this limited area that's sort of recessed and protected, but through examination, we know that this band originally extended along the whole of the garment. And in microscopic examination we can even see traces of gilding that's preserved on top of the purple paint. So we have here a really strong suggestion of the rich embroidery using gold thread brocade of the finest textiles of this era.

NARRATOR: Marco Leona is director of the Department of Scientific Research.

MARCO LEONA: In fact, we could see details like the gold only with a high powered microscope. And even with the best techniques at our disposal, we haven't yet been able to identify what this colorant is. The ancient Greek and Roman artists had an arsenal of materials at their hands. In a work of art such as this one, where the traces of pigment are both so important and so scanned, we have to work either by removing microscopic amounts at just about the diameter of a human hair, about 50 micron, or preferably by noninvasive techniques. In one word, by bringing the instrument to the work of art rather than taking a piece of the work of art and putting it in the instrument. So we've been using fibre optics techniques, laser techniques that allow us to conduct an analysis without touching the work of art.

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