Portrait of a thin-faced, bearded man
Unknown Artist, A.D. 160–180
About this artwork
Step into the world of ancient Romano-Egyptian portraiture with this striking *Portrait of a Thin-Faced Bearded Man*, created between A.D. 160 and 180 during Rome's occupation of Egypt. Painted on a limewood panel measuring 38.1 x 21.6 cm, it captures a middle-aged man with a sharp face, full beard, abundant dark curly hair, and large, eyes enhanced by violet shading possible kohl liner. The dark blue background heightens the figure's intense gaze, drawing viewers into a direct, psychological encounter preserved for nearly two millennia. This artwork belongs to the renowned Fayum mummy portrait tradition, where such panels were placed over the faces of mummified Greco-Roman Egyptians as funerary likenesses. Beards in these portraits symbolized masculinity, maturity, wisdom, and elite status, blending Egyptian afterlife beliefs with Greco-Roman realism. Crafted in encaustic—a technique mixing pigments with hot wax—the image boasts luminous, enduring colors that mimic lifelike skin tones and textures, showcasing technical mastery from antiquity. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Egyptian Art Department (Rogers Fund, 1909), this unknown artist's work exemplifies a cultural fusion: Egyptian mummification, Greek individualism, and Roman naturalism. It's a poignant window into diverse identities in a cosmopolitan Egypt, reminding us of the ancients' desire for eternal recognition.