95
94
7
feMale geoMetric figure
Sardinia, Turriga (Senorbì)
Late Neolithic (passage V–IV millennia
BC)
Marble, H. 43 cm, W. 18 cm
Polo Museale della Sardegna – Museo
Archeologico Nazionale, Cagliari, inv.
135887
Bibliography:
Thimme 1980, no. 1;
Lilliu 1999, fig. 31.
This white marble statuette, one of the
finest in the repertoire of small female
statuary of the Neolithic period, was
located in the sacred area of the
village inside a circular stone structure
(presumably, a sort of
temenos
), and
thus in a probable sacred-ceremonial
context. It has been assigned to the
Ozieri facies of the Recent Neolithic.
The figure, which can be taken as an
example of the cruciform typology,
is distinguished by its formal balance
and by the perfect symmetry of its
construction. Virtually two-dimensional
thanks to the use of the plaque-
support, the structure is perceived
in three geometric modules. The
long basal appendage – a sub-conic
volume with an elongated trapezoidal
silhouette – projects the architecture
of the statuette longitudinally. It also
anticipates the vertical tension of the
long neck (extended by two shallow,
oblique, convergent incisions on
the torso) that terminates at the top
of the head. This tension is further
emphasized by the elliptical face and
triangular pilaster-type nose.
The verticality of the figure
is interrupted by the surface
corresponding to the torso and arms,
which are joined in a trapezoidal form
jutting out on both sides. On the
quadrangular flat surface, the main
focus of the statuette, are two breasts
(rather large with respect to the overall
repertoire) placed exactly in the
middle of the vertical dimension of
the object. The slight protuberance of
the buttocks and two breasts, gender
attributes, are elegantly cited through
precise geometry by subtraction, with
no emphasis on a maternal function.
The abstraction of the female body
composed in an extremely essential
synthesis imbues the figurine with
a great iconic power, in which the
subject’s female gender, represented
nude, prevails over her appearance as
a mother.
The Senorbì example is one of the few
existing intact figures, and thus one of
the few whose original construction can
be assessed without any hypothetical
reconstruction. It represents a variant of
the cruciform plaque typology, which
can be identified by the pose (standing
or sitting), the presence or absence of
clothing (a skirt), the morphology of the
arms (a horizontal or oblique plaque,
with no expanded lateral projection),
the overall contour (also rhomboidal),
and particular facial features. The
prestige of this statuette within the
context of Sardinian production also
derives from the formal balance of
the construction generated by the
relationship of the sizes of the three
geometric modules. In fact, the
mathematical rapport between the
length of the upper section (torso and
arm+neck and head) and the lower one
(pelvis+lower limbs) is near the value of
the Greek
phi
, equal to 1.6180339887 . .
. (the golden section or golden number,
etc.).This irrational number indicates
a specific relationship of dimensions,
which, in antiquity (including pre-
Greek) and other historical epochs
(from the Renaissance to Fibonacci’s
“recursive succession”), characterized
architectural and figurative structures,
which were thus perceived as
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