A Roman portrait in high relief carved on the front of a funerary altar, depicting a married woman, Cominia Tyche. Her husband, Lucius Annius Festus set the altar up for his deceased wife, who died just short of her 28th birthday. The elaborate hairstyle of tight curls has been rendered by the sculptor with a drill and is characteristic of hair worn by aristocratic ladies of the Flavian period (ca. 69-96 CE). Now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: inv. 38.27 (Gift of Philip Hofer in 1938).