Octavia Minor: The beloved and only sister of Emperor Augustus

Busts of Octavia Minor: (1) Museo Nazionale Romano in Rome, (2) National Museum in Athens, (3) Private Collection in Wiesbaden

Octavia’s busts in Rome, Athens, and Wiesbaden.

Octavia Thurina Minor was one of the very first of Roman women to have coins minted in her image. Nonetheless, it appears that only four of her portraits are known.

One is in Rome (titled Octavia from Velletri at the Museo Nazionale Romano, Italy), another in Athens (known as Octavia from Smyrna at the National Museum, Greece), and two in private collections: Wiesbaden (Germany), and New York at the Merrin Gallery.

Also known as Octavia the Younger, she was the grand-niece of Julius Caesar. She was married twice, the second time to Mark Antony by senatorial decree, with whom she lived in their Athenian mansion between 40–36 BC.

Mark Antony, a Roman politician and military commander, abandoned her for his former lover, Queen Cleopatra VII of Egypt.

In Octavia’s memory, her brother Augustus — whom she resembled very much — built the gate of Octavia and the Porticus Octavia in Rome. The first Roman emperor, and arguably one of the greatest, Augustus was also known as Octavian.

The Merrin Gallery’s portrait is still in private hands and is said to be the best one — a masterpiece of Roman portraiture; an extremely rare, life-size bust of one of Rome’s most prominent women — Octavia Thurina the Younger.

Rare Bust of Octavia Minor at the Merrin Gallery

A portrait of Octavia Minor, Emperor Augustus’ only sister, and Mark Anthony’s wife. The bust is carved from Greek Pentelic marble at a life-like height of 18.1″ (46 cm).

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The Merrin Gallery – The New York Observer

In recent news, the Merrin Gallery was featured on The New York Observer’s list of veteran NYC galleries. Among several notorious galleries of midtown Manhattan, the Merrin Gallery on 724 Fifth Avenue was the only one specializing in ancient art:

The [Merrin] gallery dates back nearly 40 years and, pretty much, if you were a museum and you wanted a classical Greek or Roman statue, pre-Columbian relic or even a mummy during that period, you bought it here from Edward Merrin. Client museums included the Met, Brooklyn, the Getty and the Louvre. In the past decade, hot-button repatriation issues have quieted (though far from ended) collecting in this market, but the gallery, now run by Samuel Merrin, still has among the richer assortments of antiquities of any dealer in the area. Ask to see the secret cabinet behind the revolving wall.