2004 © Maxim Tabachnik
Marble Relief of Antinous as Silvanus
This close-up of the relief (130–138) shows Antinous—Emperor Hadrian’s beloved—portrayed as Silvanus, the Roman god of woods and fields. The finely carved drapery clings in soft, natural folds, echoing Greek ideals prized in Hadrian’s Rome. The youthful body beneath it hints at Antinous’s idealized beauty. After his mysterious death in the Nile, Hadrian deified him, and images like this fueled the widespread posthumous cult that celebrated him across the empire.
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