Subscribe       Search       Info       Help       Site Map      Feedback  
   
Volume 105 No. 1
January 2001
 
Previous TOC  Abstract Next TOC
 
 
 
 
PDF Full Text
 
 
  Current TOC  
  Past Issues  
  Prerelease TOC  
 
 
 ARTICLE
 
Hair and the Artifice of Roman Female Adornment
 
Elizabeth Bartman
 
figure
Stucco relief from Carthage
Roman female hairstyles were highly individualized, gendered cultural markers, in many cases having a physiognomic role in a portrait like the face itself. The paucity of surviving organic remains requires that we consult artistic representations in painting and sculpture to assess forms of these hairstyles. Despite their often fanciful conceptions, they do not represent artistic inventions, but rather, elaborate coiffures made with real human hair, usually the sitter's own. Thus wig wearing may not have been as common as has been imagined; the practice of supplying marble statues with removable wigs in contrasting stone is not in itself evidence for the wearing of wigs in antiquity. Modern commentary on the hairstyles worn by Roman women assumes frequent changes of hairstyle, an interpretation based on a misreading of the ancient evidence and essentialist views of women. 
 
 
 

| top |
Subscribe       Search       Info       Help       Site Map      Feedback