Lot Essay
The sitter is portrayed as a young man with a smooth forehead and cheeks, narrowing to a pointed chin. His eyes feature incised irises and drilled pupils, and sit below bushy eyebrows. He is closely related to two other examples, one in the Capitoline Museums (Sala delle Colombe 32, inv. no. 391), and the other in the Musée Saint-Raymond, Toulouse (inv. no. RA 68.1). His attribution, however, is more complicated. Though both portraits were once seen as Pertinax Caesar, the son of emperor Pertinax named princeps iuventutis in 193 A.D., a more convincing identification now is Gaius Fulvius Plautius Hortensianus, son of the Praetorian prefect Plautianus (for a discussion of the type and its attribution, see J.-C. Balty, Les Portraits Romains: L’époque des Sévères, pp. 161-168).
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