Vases Head of a Child
Head of a Child

Head of a Child

300–200 B.C.
This head, once part of a statue, is tilted slightly to the left. It features a full face with a broad forehead, small eyes, wide, well-shaped lips and a smiling expression. Fine locks of hair adhere closely to the cranial structure, leaving the ears uncovered and turned outward. The hair at the nape of the neck is rendered conventionally with incisions in parallel waves, parted in the center. There is a hole above the left ear. Representations of children are attested in votive contexts of Magna Graecia in the Hellenistic period, where they are connected to cult activities relating to the fertility of crops and the cycle of life.
Date
300–200 B.C.
Culture
Greek (South Italian, Tarantine)
Dimensions
H: 11.00 cm W: 11.50 cm
Medium
Terracotta with clay slip
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
82.AD.93.20
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)