Vases Portrait Head of Plautilla
Portrait Head of Plautilla

Portrait Head of Plautilla

A.D. 200–205
Depicted in this portrait is the Empress Plautilla (ca. A.D. 185-212), wife of Caracalla (A.D. 188-217) and daughter of the praetorian prefect Fulvius Plautianus. Few sculptures survive of the empress, who was exiled by her husband in A.D. 205 and then murdered on his orders in A.D. 212. She is shown as a young girl. Her hair is parted in the center, and a series of vertically oriented braids cover the sides and top of her head. These braids come down low on the nape of the neck, where they are folded back up to just below the occiput. Loose waves of hair are brushed over the frontal braids and form a wide band over the forehead. Plautilla was the first empress to wear this elaborately braided hairstyle. She turns her head to her right. Her irises are articulated and her pupils drilled. This head was once attached to a statue. The portrait has been associated stylistically with the third of Plautilla's portrait types.
The marble is fine-grained; the surface is eroded. Other damage has occurred to the tip of her nose and to her lips.
Date
A.D. 200–205
Culture
Roman
Dimensions
H: 30.50 cm W: 18.00 cm
Medium
Marble
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
72.AA.118
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)