"Beginning with Ptolemy I Soter, the Ptolemaic dynasty reigned from 305 BCE to 30 BCE, when the last Ptolemaic ruler, Kleopatra VII, committed suicide, and Octavian made Egypt a province of Rome. In their capital at Alexandria and in historically prominent Egyptian cities and sanctuaries, the Ptolemies continued the practices of their pharaonic predecessors in an attempt to integrate themselves into Egyptian society and their images into Egypt’s visual culture," explains Yale University's Susan B. Matheson. "They employed architecture and sculpture to help establish their rightful place as rulers and to present themselves as a dynasty like those that came before. This impressive display of public art featured primarily Egyptian iconography and style. Egyptian dress and traditional royal and divine attributes were typical, and inscriptions were generally in the native hieroglyphic script."
Matheson points out that Ptolemaic dynastic portraits ranged from those appearing as purely Greek, to those styled as purely Egyptian with some portraits rendered as a blend of both elements.
"It is likely that the sculptors commissioned to carve them determined the material, iconography, and style based on the wishes of their clients and the ultimate function of the portrait, Matheson notes, "Although there may have been official portrait types that emanated from Alexandria, as was later true of imperial portrait types disseminated from Rome, the king would find it expedient to have his image correspond to the preferences of local priests and officials."
Way back in 1925, classical archaeologist A. W. Lawrence in his article "Greek Sculpture in Ptolemaic Egypt" observes "It has been said that an Alexandrian School existed with ideals markedly different from those of the rest of the Hellenistic world." Unfortunately, he does not really seem to recognize a blending of styles of the Egyptian with the Greek. He describes the works produced in Egypt as a poorly executed impressionist technique in which less than able local sculptors "neglect detail in their modelling and trust to the soft finish to conceal the fact that they had put no more work than they could help into the different parts of the face but merely made it up of various blank planes."
Egyptian sculptures from the Ptolemaic period often featured details added separately in stucco. Sometimes the entire head was imported from Greece or Asia Minor with the hair or hair extensions, beards, diadems, veils, etc. added in stucco once the work arrived in Egypt. Some scholars point to this practice as common then because marble had to be imported and was therefore quite expensive.
Lawrence dismisses this observation as well.
"This habit of finishing things in stucco has been put down to a desire to economize in marble, which is not found in Lower Egypt and so was naturally expensive there. But in most cases, the quantity saved is infinitesimal, and the practice was employed in other countries where marble was abundant," Lawrence says. "It seems therefore to have been a device to save labour rather than material."
I doubt to some extent the conservation of materials as a reason for the use of stucco as well. But, although some portrait heads seemed to have been prepared for stucco additions only on the top part of the head, others, like the portrait of Ptolemy I Soter appear to have used marble only for the face while the entire back of the head is assumed to have been completed in stucco. This would appear to support the economy of materials theory.
Classicist Flavia Vanni at the University of Birmingham, in her research for her PhD thesis, "Byzantine Stucco Decoration: Cultural and Economic Implications Across the Mediterranean World, 850-1453," points out that, from a shipping perspective, big bulky pieces of marble were not divisible cargo either, so incurred more cost because of the amount of space they consumed in a cargo hold.
I also can't fully embrace the labor saving aspect of the practice either, as Lawrence proposes, at least in respect to the original production. The labor expended in crafting an ornate hair style or diadem even in stucco surely would have been roughly equivalent to carving the remainder of the marble head. Lawrence's criticisms of style and workmanship seem to cast aspersions on the skill and dedication of Egyptian sculptors in the Ptolemaic Period. Due to the date of the article (1925) I can't help but suspect that Lawrence may have allowed his British colonial perceptions of Egyptians at the tiime to bias his observations, even if he was the brother of T.E. Lawrence (of Arabia).
So if the stucco additions were not the result of economy, either of materials or labor, why was this practice employed for a number of Ptolemaic dynastic portraits? Thinking of the turbulent history of this family and the frequent fratricides and changes in succession, I wondered if stucco was used on the top or back of the head and beards so changes in dynastic succession could be more easily depicted without recarving much of an expensive marble portrait.
I've seen a number of Roman portraits where one emperor's portrait was recarved into a subsequent emperor. Recarving a portrait of Nero is always a challenge because sculptors often cannot disguise telltale remnants of his sideburns and longer than normal hairstyle. If the hair and sideburns had been rendered in stucco, a hairstyle alteration could have been relatively easy to remove and replace. The Ptolemies, following traditional Egyptian style, also attempted to have their portraits resemble, to some extent, their predecessors as a visual reference to the enduring nature of their dynasty, so recarving would be relatively minimal if a change in succession occurred.
However, I don't know of many monarchs modest enough that would commission artwork of themselves with thoughts as to its subsequent recarving by their successors.
Of course the use of stucco could have been a further attempt to blend Egyptian and Greek traditions. The use of lime and gypsum plasters in Egypt date back to the 3rd millenium BCE. The famous bust of Nefertiti dating to 1345 BCE is an exquisite example of stucco's extensive use in the production of sculpture "in the round" in ancient Egypt.
Lawrence does mention portraits outside of Egypt using a combination of marble and stucco in areas with abundant sources of marble. I found one on Christies auction site. It is tentatively identified as the Seleucid King Demetrios III Eucaerus (well-timed), on the basis of comparison to his coin portraits.
"Both portraits share the prominent hooked nose and a beard. Many late Seleucid portraits are indebted in style to contemporary Ptolemaic imagery, since they were able to maintain their hold over their territories only through Ptolemaic support. Demetrios III was the son of Antiochos VIII Grypos (Hook-nose). He was able to recover part of his father's territories in 95 B.C. with the help of Ptolemy IX Lathyrus. He was eventually defeated by the Parthian king Mithridates II, who kept him in confinement until his death in 88 B.C.E." - Christies
Such emulation of Ptolemaic dynastic sculpture may point to recognition of the use of stucco as a distinctive artistic style.
What do you think?
Extensively restored marble portrait head of Ptolemy I Soter, 4th - 3rd century BCE, only face is original, probably the entire skull was completed in stucco, courtesy of The Louvre. |
Marble portrait head of Ptolemy XII Aulete with traces of stucco on the back of the skull, 2nd half of 1st century BCE to 1st century CE, courtesy of The Louvre |
Head of Arsinoe II at The Louvre in Paris, 250-200 BCE, missing hair and possibly headdress that would have been finished in stucco. |
Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II with unfinished head, mid to late 2nd century BCE at the Yale University Art Gallery |
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