Physiognomy to showcase life accomplishments
Scribonia (FOF 28; left) bears the same confident gaze endemic to Roman male portraits as is seen in the portrait of Marcia Furnilla (center), and in the numerous portraits of Roman senators, such as this one (right) from approximately 80 CE. A masculine gaze, as we see in the Furnilla portrait, shows “the eyelids and eyebrows [as] aligned to avoid quick and erratic movements that signal shamelessness or deception,” (D’Ambra, 226-227).
Physiognomy in Roman female portraits did not always portray the subject in an idealized fashion. The simple hairstyle and matured face of Scribonia (FOF 28) stands in stark contrast to the ornately coiled hairstyle and smooth, youthful features of Claudia Antonia (FOF 31), but the unique styles of both imply that these two women are from exceptionally powerful families, or at least fortuitous circumstances. D’Ambra (220) describes a Roman woman’s maternal capabilities as “crucial in a society in which the primary objective of marriage was to produce children, particularly sons, to keep the family name alive and to maintain its property.” Scribonia, as the mother of at least six sons who survived childhood, would no doubt have been proud of her accomplishments as a successful mother, and therefore as a successful wife and materfamilias.
These two women express their pride in two different ways: Claudia Antonia does so in an idealizing way that will be explained in the section regarding the affirmation of preexisting family associations; Scribonia, on the other hand, takes a veristic approach and showcases her age and experience over her youth and fecundity. Scribonia likely drew inspiration from the Roman senators who made this style so well known, in an effort “through emphasis on the marks of age… [to] call to attention to their long service… and their faithfulness… in intended contrast to the meteoric careers and dubious methods of the individualistic faction-leaders” (Nodelman, 11). This passage also suggests that Scribonia may also have been intending to distance herself from her ancestor Pompey the Great; however, “her stern and reserved expression as ‘masculine’ in no way casts doubt on her gender and sexuality, [but rather] it indicates that she has acquired the ‘superior’ qualities demanded of respectable matrons that complement those of their fathers, brothers, and husbands but do not challenge their mastery” (D’Ambra, 227). While the portrait of Scribonia is more veristic than usual for a female portrait, it is nowhere near as veristic as the portraits of the Roman Senators; nor does it contain the same level of severity, as her straight, thin mouth nevertheless echoes Pompey’s subtle smirk. While she “[borrowed] masculine aspects to elevate [herself]” (Nodelman, 12), she retains some subtle reminders of her femininity and biological ancestry.
Scribonia adopts the philosophy of Diocles and masculinizes her physiognomy, which was socially acceptable to most Romans -- Roman men who displayed feminine qualities, on the other hand, were more often ostracized (D’Ambra, 2006). The masculine aspects of her physiognomy include a straight, unflinching, direct gaze, and her severe expression, all of which indicate power, intelligence, and self-control. Both this and the veristic rendering of the face is also seen in the funerary statue of Marcia Furnilla, wife of the Emperor Titus. Roman doctors and physiognomists both came to a general consensus that the masculine qualities of a woman increase her chances of bearing sons, thereby making masculine women desirable to men who needed heirs (D’Ambra, 227). In the case of Scribonia, who has already succeeded in providing sons, her desire to masculinize her features was probably not influenced by this last detail; and as most Roman women had their portraits made during or after their marriage, this showcasing of masculinized features in bust portraiture likely had little effect on whom they would marry. It is most likely, therefore, that this approach was taken by women who wanted to showcase their ability, not only to bear children, as Livia wished to express, but to bear sons.