Bronze statuette of the goddess Fortuna, it is a bronze, 13,00 cm high, including the base. Based on the goddess Isis-Fortuna from a Boscoreale lararium. Now in the Walters Museum, Baltimore, USA.
Every Roman house had its domestic shrine or lararium, in which small statuettes of deities and of the lares gods (those who protected the household) were placed.
This small statuette was found along with six others (Walters 54.747-54.750, 54.752 and 54.2290). A genie (or priest) stood before the household deities, Isis-Fortuna, Mercury, seated Jupiter, Alexander Helios and standing Jupiter. These were divinities that the family venerated particularly for the continued good fortune of the household.
LOD0: 92K Poly / 92K Tris
LOD1: 46K Poly / 46K Tris
LOD2: 18K Poly / 18K Tris
LOD3: 3K Poly / 3K Tris
Game Ready Model
Formats: .FBX; .OBJ; .blend.
PBR materials (JPG/PNG)
Texture maps: Base Color, Normal Map, Metallic, Roughness, AO, Height.
Texture resolution: 1K, 2K and 4K.
Rigged: No
Animated: No
Mask for color alternatives: No
Elena ValeroDesirée García Espinosa
Orr, D. G. Roman Domestic Religion: A Study of the Roman Lararia. University of Maryland, 1969.
Pérez Ruiz, M. (2008). El culto en la casa romana. AnMurcia, 23-24, págs. 199-229.
Waites, M. C. The Nature of the Lares and their Representation in Román Art. AJA, Vol. 24, Nº3, 1920.
In this link you have access to the Walters Art Museum's file on the piece: