Portrait of a Man Wearing a Laurel Wreath

Description

This portrait belongs to a large group of similar works known as “Fayum portraits,” so-named for the region in northern Egypt in which many have been discovered. To create this man’s likeness, the artist painted a thin piece of wood with encaustic, or pigmented wax, a medium that not only gave the impression of three-dimensionality but also resisted fading and deterioration in the dry climate of Egypt. These highly individualized and lifelike portraits conveyed the wealth and status of the person depicted through clothing, jewelry, and other embellishments, such as the gold wreath of laurels worn by this man.

Provenance

Emily Crane Chadbourne (1871- 1964), Paris, London, and Chicago; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1922.

Portrait of a Man Wearing a Laurel Wreath

Ancient Roman

Roman Period, early to mid–2nd century

Accession Number

5520

Medium

Lime (linden) wood, beeswax, pigments, gold, textile, and natural resin

Dimensions

41.9 × 24.1 × 0.2 cm (16 1/2 × 9 1/2 × 1/8 in.)

Classification

painting

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Emily Crane Chadbourne