during a 2013 exhibition Eumachia is dressed in a
palla over a tunic and
stola, in Hellenistic style. Eumachia has an idealized portrait. Palla, delicate women's poses, features, and material, was the aim of Rome's social control approach, which alludes to
Livia, whose statues popularized the representation of the stola. Family members adopting aspects of the emperor's
physiognomy emphasize family cohesion in imperial portraits. The wavy strands of hair separated in the center and pushed back from Eumachia's face imply that the image incorporates elements of the portraiture of imperial ladies. Moreover, her individualizing characteristics highlight the classicizing traits: her small mouth, slightly bent head revealing her delicate neck, and veiled hair. Her stance is quite dynamic in that her right knee is slightly bent, and her left foot is in the front, reflecting a trait that suggests more active body language in that she looks to step off her pedestal while having a closed form and wearing heavy garments. She is also gazing down on her audience that opposes the social mores and highlights the discrepancy between ideal and actual. Despite her wealth, she still had to balance the demands on her to adhere to conventional fashions with the more rebellious elements of her portrait. The placing of Eumachia's honorific statue extends from the fountain to the porticos, as well as the high level of craftsmanship. Also, the idealizing portrait characteristics emphasize her link to the empress and her fulfillment of Augustan
mores. Such references to the central authority solidified her elite reputation in Pompeii, emphasizing her importance to the fullers who sponsored the statue and the general public who benefited from the new complex. The rough translation of this inscription is: "to Eumachia, daughter of Lucius, public priestess of Pompeian Venus, from the fullers." See
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum: "EVMACHIAE L F SACERD PVBL FVLLONES,". A copy of the statue is in Pompeii while the original is at the Naples Archaeological Museum. ==References==