Légende
Roman statue, unknown Roman workshop. The figure of a standing man dressed in a tunic and toga, depicted in contrapposto. The right arm is exposed from the elbow, the left is almost completely hidden under the toga. Head from another statue. The face is small, with short stubble laid flat but carefully modeled. The mouth is compact, the corners turned slightly downward. The eyes are large, shadowed by drawn-down eyebrows, with a marked iris and pupil. Rectangular base, unprofiled. 1st–3rd century torso ca. mid-1st century AD; head 3rd quarter of 3rd century AD, Roman Empire 27 BC–476. Sculpture, weight 870 kg., A full-length white marble statue of a bearded man standing on a rectangular base, wearing layered draped garments with detailed folds that cover his body from shoulders to feet, one arm extended downward with the hand holding part of the drapery and the other arm bent forward holding a rolled object; the figure has short textured hair and a trimmed beard, a visible neckline beneath the drapery, and bare feet peeking from under the folds, all set against a plain gray background with tones of white, off-white, gray, and subtle beige on the stone.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A05_168
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
52.1Mo (1.9Mo) / 25.7cm x 50.8cm / 3036 x 6000 (300dpi)