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Source Description

The head and shoulders are meant to be seen in a three-quarter view. The back of the head and shoulders are flattened in two planes that meet at an angle behind the neck. A single groove, used for attachment, cuts vertically through both surfaces. The top of the head is also flat; the remains of a wooden pin suggest that the top part of the head was made of a separate piece of ivory attached with the pin. The bust probably ornamented the fulcrum, or headrest, or a couch. The upswept hair falling back from the low, furrowed forehead, the large deep-set eyes with upward gaze, and the full lips conform to the descriptions of Alexander the Great and to other known representations of him. The closest comparision with this piece is a tiny ivory head (now at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC) identified as Alexander found in a royal tomb at Vergina in northern Greece and thought to have ornamented, together with other ivory heads, the bier of the man buried in the tomb. A direct comparison of the Walters head with large-scale photographes of the Vergina head shows striking similarities in the physiognomy of the features and the artistic style of representation, suggesting that the two are close in date. The Walters head is said to come from Alexandria. During the feuding that followed Alexander's death in Babylon, the ablest of his generals, Ptolemy, managed to acquire Alexander's body for burial in the city named in his honor. The Walters head could have ornamented a funeral couch in the same fashion as heads from the Vergina tomb.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
2858
label
Alexander the Great
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
2
Source metadata
id
2858
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Alexander the Great
description
The head and shoulders are meant to be seen in a three-quarter view. The back of the head and shoulders are flattened in two planes that meet at an angle behind the neck. A single groove, used for attachment, cuts vertically through both surfaces. The top of the head is also flat; the remains of a wooden pin suggest that the top part of the head was made of a separate piece of ivory attached with the pin. The bust probably ornamented the fulcrum, or headrest, or a couch. The upswept hair falling back from the low, furrowed forehead, the large deep-set eyes with upward gaze, and the full lips conform to the descriptions of Alexander the Great and to other known representations of him. The closest comparision with this piece is a tiny ivory head (now at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC) identified as Alexander found in a royal tomb at Vergina in northern Greece and thought to have ornamented, together with other ivory heads, the bier of the man buried in the tomb. A direct comparison of the Walters head with large-scale photographes of the Vergina head shows striking similarities in the physiognomy of the features and the artistic style of representation, suggesting that the two are close in date. The Walters head is said to come from Alexandria. During the feuding that followed Alexander's death in Babylon, the ablest of his generals, Ptolemy, managed to acquire Alexander's body for burial in the city named in his honor. The Walters head could have ornamented a funeral couch in the same fashion as heads from the Vergina tomb.
provenance
Dikran Kelekian New York and Paris [date and mode of acquisition unknown] [said to be from Alexandria]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1924, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.
date
late 4th-3rd century BCE (Hellenistic)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
furniture
imageCount
2
pageCount
2
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
9
height
5.3
depth
3.4
dimensionsRaw
H: 3 9/16 × W: 2 1/16 × D: 1 5/16 in. (9 × 5.3 × 3.4 cm)
Source extras
cul
Greek
med
ivory
creator_ids
6256
collection_ids
GRC
exhibition_ids
215
2237
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
cb76d3ecc7b211ff
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
02b2327b12c250e6
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no