Examples of veristic portraiture in the following topics:
-
- Roman portraiture during the Republic is identified by its considerable realism, known as veristic portraiture.
- As with other forms of Roman art, Roman portraiture borrowed certain details from Greek art but adapted these to their own needs.
- Veristic images often show their male subject with receding hairlines, deep winkles, and even with warts.
- The use of veristic portraiture began to diminish during the Late Republic in the first century BCE.
- Veristic portraiture of an Old Man.
-
- Portraiture throughout the Republic celebrated old age with its verism.
- Roman portraiture during the Republic is identified by its considerable realism, known as veristic portraiture.
- The use of veristic portraiture began to diminish in the first century BCE.
- The portraits of Julius Caesar are more veristic than those of Pompey.
- Veristic portraiture of an Old Man.
-
- Trajan Decius's portrait at first seems to take its artistic style from Republican veristic portraiture, but a closer look reveals something else.
-
- His portraits show him as old, but fit and without the winkles of wisdom seen in Republican veristic portraiture.
-
- Aule Metele dresses as a Roman magistrate, and his face is a cross between Hellenistic and Roman veristic portraiture.
-
- Abandoning the veristic style of the Republican period, his portraits always showed him as an idealized young man.
- Like his father-in-law, Tiberius maintained a youthful appearance in his portraiture in sculpture.
-
- The verists' vehement form of realism emphasized the ugly and sordid.
- George Grosz and Otto Dix are considered the most important of the verists.
- Other verists, like Christian Schad, depicted reality with a clinical precision, which suggested both an empirical detachment and intimate knowledge of the subject.
- Max Beckmann, who is sometimes called an expressionist although he never considered himself part of any movement, was considered to be a verist and the most important artist of Neue Sachlichkeit.
- Compared to the verists, the classicists more clearly exemplify the "return to order" that arose in the arts throughout Europe.
-
- Imperial portraiture of men and women in the early- to mid second century reflects increasing austerity and interest in the Greeks.
- Imperial portraiture under the Flavians had begun depicting the emperors as mature, older men.
- Nerva's portraiture followed the style of imperial portraiture during the Flavian era.
- The portraiture of Nerva and later Trajan display an increasing militaristic look.
- Contrast male and female imperial portraiture during this time period from that of the Flavian dynasty.
-
- Traditional North Coast Peruvian ceramic art uses a limited palette, relying primarily on red and white, fineline painting, fully modeled clay, veristic figures, and stirrup spouts.
-
- Imperial portraiture of the Tetrarchs depicts the four emperors together and are nearly identical.
- The portraiture symbolizes the concept of co-rule and cohesiveness instead of the power of the individual.
- A porphyry bust of Galerius (c. 300 CE) shows the direction that portraiture was taking in the fourth century.
- These attributes follow those of other sculptures of the Late Antique style and foreshadow the increasingly geometric form that facial features would assume in imperial portraiture and sculpture in general.