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Portrait of Augustus

roman school


This bust portrays the first emperor, who wears a cuirass and the paludamentum. The face shows the ‘iconic’ traits of Augustus: the forehead defined by locks of hair, the thin face, and the determined gaze.

The sculpture forms part of a series of 16 busts which were held at Palazzo Borghese in Campo Marzio from the last quarter of the 17th century and then displayed in Room 4 of Villa Pinciana beginning in 1832, together with most of the other works of the set. The busts were executed in polychrome stone, in accordance with a display arrangement conceived by Giuseppe Gozzani, administrator of Camillo Borghese’s belongings.

The name of the sculptor is unknown; critics date the work to the 17th century.


Object details

Inventory
CXXXIX
Location
Date
17th century
Classification
Period
Medium
porphyry and oriental alabaster
Dimensions
height 90 cm
Provenance

Included in decoration of the Gallery of Palazzo Borghese in Campo Marzio between 1674 and 1676 (H. Hibbard, ‘Palazzo Borghese Studies. II, the Galleria’, The Burlington Magazine, 104 (1962), pp. 9-20); Inventario Fidecommissario Borghese 1833, C, p. 49, no. 111. Purchased by Italian state, 1902.

Conservation and Diagnostic
  • 1995/1996 C.B.C. Coop. a.r.l.

Commentary

The facial features of this bust clearly indicate that the subject is Augustus: the hair that partially covers the forehead, with the locks forming the typical pincer and scissor motifs, the face that tapers down toward the chin, the regular nose, and the eyes given a look of determination by the contracted eyebrows – all recurring traits in the iconography of the first emperor. His smooth young face – indeed Augustus wished to be portrayed as such even as an old man (Zanker, 2013, pp. 153-159) – finds perfect expression here in the polished surface of the porphyry while contrasting abruptly with the lack of definition of his hair.

The emperor wears the lorica (a light cuirass), over which is draped the paludamentum (the military cloak), which is gathered in deep folds and buttoned to the lorica on his shoulder by means of a round fibula.

The work forms part of a series of 16 busts in porphyry from Palazzo Borghese in Campo Marzio: they reproduce the Twelve Caesars narrated by Suetonius, with the addition of Nerva and Trajan and second versions of Vitellius and Titus. They were formerly placed in recesses in the gallery and framed by an arrangement of plaster reliefs depicting key episodes in the life of each and personifications of their respective virtues; this decoration was executed by Cosimo Fancelli between 1674 and 1676 (Hibbard 1962). The busts remained here until roughly 1830 (Nibby, p. 360): two years later, they are documented as forming part of the display of Room 4 of Villa Pinciana (Nibby 1832, p. 96). To the series was now added a second bust of Vespasian, sculpted by Tommaso Fedeli in 1619, which had been in the Gladiator Room.

According to documents from the Borghese Archive, the series was composed, as we have seen, of the ‘Twelve Caesars’, with the addition of Nerva and Trajan as well as second versions of Vitellius and Titus (Vatican Secret Archive, AB, b. 5688, no. 15, published in Hibbard 1962, appendix, doc. I, pp. 19-20). In 1830 Nibby saw the series when it was still in Campo Marzio, describing the works as ‘16 busts with heads in porphyry, representing the 12 Caesars and 4 consuls’. Two years later, when they had been moved to Villa Pinciana and displayed along the wall of Room 4, he listed them as Trajan, Galba, Claudius, Otho, Vespasian (two exemplars) Scipio Africanus, Agrippa, Augustus, Vitellius (two exemplars), Titus, Nero, Cicero, Domitian, Vespasian, Caligula and Tiberius; this catalogue was confirmed by the 1833 Inventario Fidecommissario.

Yet if this description (which includes a second Vespasian, executed by Tommaso Fedeli in 1619 and transferred from the Gladiator Room) corresponds to the current state of the series, we are left with several uncertainties: to begin with, we must ask what happened to the busts of Caesar, Titus and Nerva, which were present in 1674-76 but do not form part of the series today; secondly, we must wonder who the fourth consul referred to by Nibby in 1830 could be, given that currently only three are represented (Agrippa, Cicero and Scipio Africanus); and finally, we must inquire where the busts of the consuls came from. It is therefore possible that the sculptures displayed in the gallery, which were already present in Palazzo Borghese, did not correspond to those envisioned for the iconographic programme of the vault: this discrepancy may have indeed complicated the identification of the portraits. This theory is supported by the common date of execution of the busts, which critics believe were all sculpted in the same period during the 17th century (Faldi 1954, pp. 16-17; Della Pergola, 1974; Moreno, C. Stefani, 2000, p. 129; Del Bufalo 2018, p. 116).

Sonja Felici




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