Vases Statuette of a Striding Comic Actor
Statuette of a Striding Comic Actor

Statuette of a Striding Comic Actor

1st century A.D.
An actor wearing a bearded mask strides forward, clasping his garment with one hand and gesturing with the other. He has lost the grotesque padding of earlier actors, and wears a normal cloak over close-fitting undergarments. Roman comedy drew strongly on the traditions of Greek New Comedy. It focused on the humorous aspects of normal domestic life, and almost always included a love story in which the two lovers eventually marry after overcoming various obstacles. These plays tend to have a recurring cast of stock characters: the cunning slave, the boastful soldier, the maiden, the scheming tart, the rustic youth, the admirable young man, and this one, the irate father.Several other versions of this actor statuette survive, providing information on its date and how it was used. One of stands on a small base, while another decorates a lamp. These objects show that small bronze figures of actors were used as general household knick-knacks, reminders of pleasant entertainment. The form of the base and the lamp also suggest a date in the first century A.D.
Date
1st century A.D.
Culture
Roman
Dimensions
H: 7.10 cm
Medium
Bronze
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
96.AB.188
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)