Search results

Start typing

Classical male bust 125-175 AD

Marble | 80.0 cm (including base/stand) | RCIN 1297

Queen's Presence Chamber, Hampton Court Palace

Your share link is...

  Close

  • This Roman marble portrait bust of a Youth with a Wreath was acquired by Charles I. Formerly in the Gonzaga family collection in Mantua, it was sold to Charles I by Duke Vincenzo II of Mantua circa 1625.

    The marble portrait depicts a Roman youth with windswept hairstyle endings in a fringe of locks above the forehead and with a laurel wreath (symbol of the youthful god Apollo) encircling the head, tied at the back with a fillet. It has been suggested that the hairstyle is reminiscent of the first official portrait of Marcus Aurelius when a young boy, an image that was imitated for contemporary depictions of male youths. The date has been assigned to the 2nd century AD, in the late Hadrianic or early Antonine period. The head has been set on a later bust with a chlaymis, a short mantle, arranged over the left shoulder and fastened with a brooch.

    During his reign, Charles I put together an important collection of classical antiquities. Five outstanding Roman marble portrait busts (RCIN 1296, 1297, 1298, 1299 and 1300) dating from the 2nd century AD, which once belonged to Charles I, remain today in the Royal Collection. In a period when collecting antiquities became fashionable - although it remained exclusive to the very wealthiest because of the cost and rarity of the pieces - Charles I intended to imitate the grand collections of Renaissance princes in the continent.


    Provenance

    Acquired by Charles I

  • Medium and techniques

    Marble

    Measurements

    80.0 cm (including base/stand)

    68.5 cm (excluding base/stand)

  • Bibliographic reference(s)

    Elizabeth Angelicoussis / The Stuart Legacy, ancient busts at Hampton Court Palace / Mitteilungen des Deutscehn Archaologischen Instituts Romische Abteilung / Band 110 / 2003 / Verlag Philipp von Zabern / Mainz am Rhein pp57 - 92


The income from your ticket contributes directly to The Royal Collection Trust, a registered charity. The aims of The Royal Collection Trust are the care and conservation of the Royal Collection, and the promotion of access and enjoyment through exhibitions, publications, loans and educational activities.