When you work with ancient objects, new discoveries are often small: a fragment of a vase, for example, or half an earring.
But Jeffrey Spier, the Getty Villa’s senior curator of antiquities, recently stumbled upon something much bigger.
This past spring, Spier was in New York and dropped by a gallery in midtown Manhattan. While there, he turned around and noticed the marble head of a stern-looking older woman mounted on a pedestal by the wall.
“I immediately thought: That’s the head!” Spier recalled.
Decades of studying Greek and Roman art and a keen visual memory (an indispensable skill for any curator) snapped into place. Spier had just identified a carved marble head that had been mysteriously missing for decades from the body of the Getty’s 2,000-year-old Roman Statue of Draped Female.
To most people, ancient classical sculptures probably look similar: remarkably graceful drapery, straight noses, perfect physiques. But as Spier explained, “Roman sculptors prided themselves on accurate and realistic portraits. Unlike the Greeks, they didn’t create idealized beauty. So once I saw a photograph of this sculpture’s missing head, I recognized it easily, the way you’d recognize a person you’d met before.” He added with a laugh, “When I saw it I thought: Don’t I know you?” Spier took photos of the head on his phone and, when he returned to the Villa, shared them with his colleagues. All agreed that a fortuitous match had been made.
The whereabouts of the Roman woman’s head had been a mystery for decades. The statue was acquired by the Getty in 1972 and is currently in storage. About a year ago, Spier and associate curator Jens Daehner began going through the artworks in storage to assess them for the Villa collection’s coming reinstallation (scheduled for 2018). The headless Statue of Draped Female proved intriguing to them, and with the help of provenance researchers Judith Barr and Nicole Budrovich, they found documentation that confirmed the statue did have its original head while on the art market in the early 20th century.
Yet sometime before 1972, as the 7-foot-tall lady circulated through several European collections, she was decapitated.
But why? And by whom? Spier and his colleagues can only speculate on a motive. Perhaps the neck partially broke in transit and then the owner decided to remove the head, or maybe a former owner felt they could make a larger profit selling two separate pieces rather than one tall statue.
Whoever deprived this Roman woman of her head wasn’t particularly careful about it. Associate conservator Eduardo Sanchez is fairly certain that the head was broken off intentionally by use of a power tool drill in combination with hard impacts to the front of the neck. When the head was brought to the Getty Villa, Sanchez and fellow associate conservator Jeff Maish created a lightweight replica of the broken neck surface to test its fit to the neck break on the body. The fit was inarguably perfect, except for some missing fragments in the front of the neck.
This discovery brings to mind another “reunion” of ancient body parts. The famed Greek marble statue of Laocoön and His Sons (ca. between 27 BC and AD 68) was unearthed in 1506 and installed at the Vatican in Rome. The statue was in surprisingly good condition but missing a few pieces. Four centuries after its discovery, in 1906, Laocoön’s missing right arm was found by an archaeologist/curator among a group of marble statuary fragments in a builder’s yard in Rome. Previous conservators had guessed at the position of the missing arm and created a prosthetic (shown below at left). However, the discovery of the real arm proved the artist’s original intention, a physical pose which some argued increases the sense of pathos in Laocoön’s struggle.
The restoration of the head to Statue of Draped Female may not add much drama to its interpretation, but now that we can see her face it does provoke questions about who she was. Spier assumes the Roman woman must have had significant wealth and status to have such a large statue made of her. She could have been a wife of a Roman emperor, whose portraits were often on coins—yes, a hunt through coins of the period is on.
While the head and body are prepared for re-capitation (not a typical task for antiquities conservators) the Antiquities team is continuing to comb through 19th-century catalogues and travel guides in French, Italian, and Latin, trying to flesh out the details of the statue’s past, and to discover the identity of the Roman woman she was modeled after.