Vases Head of a Youth
Head of a Youth

Head of a Youth

300–100 B.C.
The head of a young man has a long neck and an elongated, oval face with well-defined features: under a low brow are small, regularly shaped eyes with sharply outlined eyelids, a straight nose, and a half-open mouth. The smooth hair is parted off-center and combed forward in finely defined tufts over the broad forehead. On the back of the neck, simple parallel grooves form broad, flattened locks and there is a circular hole where the neck attaches to the head. The man’s distinctive features suggest a languid expression emphasized by the half-open lips. This type is not common in the Tarentine area during the Hellenistic period.
Date
300–100 B.C.
Culture
Greek (South Italian, Tarantine)
Dimensions
H: 9.30 cm W: 9.20 cm
Medium
Terracotta with clay slip
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
82.AD.93.6
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)