Artwork Page for Funerary Portrait of a Young Girl

Details / Information for Funerary Portrait of a Young Girl

Funerary Portrait of a Young Girl

c. 25–37 CE
Measurements
Overall: 39.4 x 17.4 cm (15 1/2 x 6 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
107 Egyptian
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Did You Know?

This painting can be dated based on the hairstyle popular at the end of the reign of Emperor Tiberius (reigned 14–37 CE).

Description

Transforming the spirit—not beautifying the mortal body—may have been the purpose of adding golden lips and jewelry to this painting. Egyptian-style burial customs and arts persisted throughout Greek, Roman, and Byzantine rule over Egypt (305 BCE–641 CE). The woman depicted in this panel lived between cultures. Her or her family’s choice of mummification reflected historical Egyptian practices of creating a physical “duplicate” for the deceased’s soul to rest in, and their decision to color her lips gold here may symbolize how death transformed her into an akh (effective spirit). In contrast, the choice of her clothing and hairstyle showed her embrace of contemporary ideals of Hellenic (Greco-Roman) Egyptian identity.
A vertically oriented pigmented beeswax painting on a wood panel depicts a young girl with a medium-light skin tone, curly black hair tucked behind her ears, and a crown made of leaves in her hair. Parts of the painting are highlighted in golden paint, including her crown, earrings, lips, necklace, and decorations on her white and purple draped clothing.

Funerary Portrait of a Young Girl

c. 25–37 CE

Egypt, Roman Empire, late Tiberian

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