Roman Marble Bust of the Emperor Caracalla depicted as Sole Ruler
In AD 212 this portrait type, the so-called 'sole ruler' type, replaced the portrait of Caracalla as the young successor to the throne. It remained in use until AD 217. Depicted turning sharply to his left, his face contorted in a characteristic forbidding frown, his creased forehead with curving eyebrows drawn together, the eyes deep-set with articulated pupils, the nose broad with a short moustache above his downturned mouth, his strong chin cleft and covered with a short curling beard, his hair composed of tight curls with drilling, the thick sideburns joining his beard, wearing a paludamentum draped around his shoulders. Mounted on a turned marble pedestal base and tall marble plinth.
Provenance
Publications
- , Rome A vision of Antiquity, Pictures and Drawings, Classical Sculpture, Chaucer Fine Arts
- Minerva: the International Review of Ancient Art & Archaeology
- , Bonhams
- Roman Times, Bust of Caracalla goes on the auction block
- , ‘Cruellest’ Roman Emperor’s 250K Bust to Auction
- "Antiquities Sale", Bonhams, London
- , "Roman Marble Sculpture", Mougins Museum of Classical Art, France
- , "L'antiquité au goût du jour", Connaissance des Arts
- , "Enjoy the Experience of a Museum with Difference! MACM", Ancient Warfare, Slovakia
- , "Enjoy the Experience of a Museum with Difference! MACM", Ancient History, Rotterdam
- , "C'est quoi cette oeuvre?'", Mougins Infos, France
Exhibitions
- , Chaucer Fine Arts, London, UK, 12th June 1980 — 18th June 1980
- Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins (MACM), Mougins, France, from June 2011
N.B. Our online collection is being continually updated thanks to ongoing research and documentation efforts carried out by the MACM documentation team. Any additional information is welcome, please contact us.