Fragment of a relief with head of soldier (signifer or standard bearer)
2nd half of the 1st century or early 2nd century AD
Place of ManufactureRome, Lazio, Italy
Medium/TechniqueMarble, Italian or possibly Pentelic
DimensionsOverall: 35 × 34.2 × 8.6 cm (13 3/4 × 13 7/16 × 3 3/8 in.)
Credit LineCharles Amos Cummings Bequest Fund
Accession number59.336
On View
Not on viewClassificationsSculpture
Collections
NOTES:
[1] In the past, the relief has been associated with a 1577 drawing by the sculptor Pierre Jacques labeled “Piazza Sciarra” recording a relief from the Arch of Claudius excavated in 1562 near the Piazza Sciarra, Rome (Salomon Reinach, L’album de Pierre Jacques, Sculpteur de Reims, dessiné à Rome de 1572 à 1577 (Paris, 1902), pl. 30). However, the drawing is in fact after another relief, now at the Louvre (inv. no. LL.398). It is doubtful that the MFA relief comes from the Arch of Claudius since the only two reliefs securely associated with the arch do not match the MFA relief either in terms of scale or style (G. M. Koeppel, “'Two Reliefs from the Arch of Claudius in Rome,” RM 90 (1983), pp. 103-109). However, the fact that the present relief was purchased by the MFA together with another showing a griffin head (MFA accession no. 59.337), which resembles a drawing by Pierre Jacques labeled “in piace dy Sciara 1576” (see Reinach, L’album de Pierre Jacques, pl. 29) could suggest a common origin for the two sculptures near the Piazza Sciarra. On the history of excavations at this site, see A. A. Barrett, “Claudius’ British Victory Arch in Rome,” Britannia 22 (1991), pp. 1-19, esp. pp. 4-5. For the subsequent history of the reliefs discovered there, see H. Stuart Jones, “Notes on Roman Historical Sculptures,” Papers of the British School at Rome 3 (1906), pp. 220-221. For a theory about the presence of several triumphal arches near the Piazza Sciarra, see F. Castagnoli, “Due archi trionfali della Via Flaminia presso Piazza Sciarra,” BullComm 70 (1942), pp. 57-82.
[2] See C. C. Vermeule and M. B. Comstock, Sculpture in Stone (MFA Boston, 1976), p. 147, cat. no. 237. According to Cornelius Vermeule at the time of the acquisition, he had first seen the relief in London in 1952 and it was "from a British country house."
[3] According to Cornelius Vermeule at the time of the sculpture's acquisition.
[4] This was the price paid for MFA accession nos. 59.336 and 59.337.
about A.D. 160–180
about 525 B.C.
probably 2nd century A.D.
Early 1st century A.D.
late 1st B.C.
about 445–435 B.C.
late 5th century B.C.
about 400–375 B.C.