Vases Statuette of a Seated Old Woman
Statuette of a Seated Old Woman

Statuette of a Seated Old Woman

400–200 B.C.
The figure of an old woman, hunched slightly forward, is seated on a stool. She wears a chiton, beneath which the sagging breasts and belly are visible; originally the arms were extended forward. The very large head has roughly modeled, caricatured facial features: furrowed eyebrows on a forehead marked by two deep creases, elongated eyes with upper eyelids exaggerated to suggest swelling, broad nose, large mouth with half-open swollen lips twisted into a mocking smile. The hair is pulled back into a sakkos, or fabric cap, that culminates in a broad bow. She wears sandals, and there are small holes on either the side of the head. Statuettes depicting seated old women belong to the repertory of comic-theater characters, whose physical imperfections were a source of humor.
Date
400–200 B.C.
Culture
Greek (South Italian, Tarantine)
Dimensions
H: 11.50 cm W: 5.00 cm
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
78.AD.295
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)