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Tomb relief of the Publius Gessius family

Roman
Late Republican or Early Imperial Period
about 20–1 B.C.
Place of Manufacture: Italy, Lazio

Medium/Technique Marble from Carrara, Italy
Dimensions Overall: 65 × 204.5 × 34 cm, 907.19 kg (25 9/16 × 80 1/2 × 13 3/8 in., 2000 lb.)
Credit Line Archibald Cary Coolidge Fund
Accession Number37.100
ClassificationsSculpture
Preoccupied with attaining immortality through remembrance by the living, the Romans made arrangements to ensure that they were properly memorialized. The wealthy built elaborate tombs that lined major roads into and out of cities, where they would be seen daily by residents and travelers. Most of these monuments bore commemorative inscriptions and were decorated with portraits and sometimes biographical scenes. In addition to serving as sites for annual rituals held by families in honor of the dead, the tombs conspicuously recalled the deceased to all those who passed by and saw them.

In the first century B.C., funerary reliefs such as this one were used to decorate modest tombs associated primarily with a class of Romans defined by their status as freed slaves (liberti) or the freeborn children of former slaves. Set into the walls of tomb chambers, either on the outside facing the street or lining the interior, these reliefs were typically carved with windowlike recesses occupied by groups of bust-length portraits. The portraits were executed in the same harshly realistic style used to represent members of the Roman upper classes, a self-conscious assertion of belonging to the dominant Roman culture.

The inscriptions on this relief identify the respectably dressed woman at left as Fausta Gessia. In the center, Publius Gessius, her husband-and her former owner, when she was enslaved-wears a military cuirass and grasps a sword hilt, emphasizing his dutiful service to the Roman army. The young man on the right, Publius Gessius Primus, is probably their son, who is identified as a freed slave, indicating that he was born before his father granted his mother's freedom. The inscriptions also relate that Fausta built the family's funerary monument with funds set aside in the will of Primus, who must have predeceased his mother.

Catalogue Raisonné Sculpture in Stone (MFA), no. 319; Sculpture in Stone and Bronze (MFA), p. 114 (additional published references); Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), pp. 104-105.
DescriptionThe funerary relief shows nearly half-figure portraits of three members of the family of the Gessii. The old man in the center, Publius Gessius, son of Publius of the Romilian tribe, evidently saw military service in the wars of the last century of the republic. He apparently held the high rank of either Military Tribune or Legatus, as indicated by his costume. He wears a muscle cuirass, an under-tunic (or arming-doublet) with pteryges, a sword belt worn high-up on the waist as a symbol of high rank, and a military cloak on the left shoulder and forearm. His left hand has a ring on the ring finger and grasps the hilt of his sword. The matronly woman, Gessia Fausta, wears a tunic and mantle (palla), her hair is braided in a nodus at the front, and she has a large mole on her left cheek. The young man at right, Publius Gessius Primus, wears a tunic and toga. All their pupils are delineated.

The relief features a Latin inscription in three parts:
-below the portraits: GESSIA.P.L.FAVSTA.P.GESSIVS.P.F.ROM.P.GESSIVS.P.L.PRIMVS "Gessia Fausta, freedwoman of Publius, Publius Gessius, son of Publius, of the Romilian tribe, Publius Gessius Primus, freedman of Publius"
-at left: EX.TESTAM/P.GESSI.P.L./PRIMI
"From the testament of Publius Gessius Primus, freedman of Publius":
-at right: ARBIT[RATU]/GESSIA[E]/FAUSTA[E]
"Under the direction of Gessia Fausta"

Gessia Fausta and Publius Gessius Primus were once slaves of Publius and were freed by him. It was customary for freed persons to take the name of their former master. In this case, Fausta probably became the wife of Publius and Primus was probably their son, born before his mother had been freed. Primus possesses a combination of his parents' features--his father's sunken cheeks and his mother's projecting upper jaw. The tomb was built from funds provided in the will of Primus, under the supervision of Fausta, the surviving member of the trio.

The upper right edge is mostly broken away, including part of the inscription; the upper molding and the left corner have suffered lesser damages. The back is coarsely roughed out, and was recut on the right. The sides and front were finished with a claw chisel. Broken iron pins are visible on both sides of each portrait, indicating that the heads were once wearing some kind of headgear, maybe a wreath. The surface shows a brown crusty deposit, visible in nearly all areas, including the damaged noses of the three portraits. A faint red blush is visible at the top of Fausta’s head, maybe some pigment remains.

Scientific Analysis:

University of South Florida Lab No. 8417: Isotope ratios - delta13C +2.0 / delta18O -1.9. Attribution - Carrara. Justification - C and O isotopes, fine grain, opaque, relief from Italy
ProvenanceSeptember, 1936, sold by Pacifici (dealer), probably with Aldo Jandolo (dealer), Rome, to Brummer Gallery, New York (stock no. P13087) [see note]; 1937, sold by Brummer Gallery to the MFA for $8000. (Accession Date: January 14, 1937)

NOTE: According to the Brummer Gallery stock card, this was purchased from Pacifici with a commission going to Marie [?] Jandolo. In 1937, dealer Aldo Jandolo stated that it had been excavated in September 1936 on the Via Cassia near Viterbo. At the time of acquisition, Brummer stated that it was excavated in Rome and exported with a permit.