167
166
43
feMale figure WitH raiSed
arMS
Egypt, no provenance
Naqada II period (ca. 3450–3300 BC)
Painted baked clay, H. 23.7 cm,
W. 15.1 cm
Musées Royaux d’Art et d’Histoire,
Brussels, inv. E.3006
Bibliography:
Hornemann 1966, pl.
914; Ucko 1968, p. 161, pl. XXXVI; De
Roy, Rammant-Peeters 1985, pp. 4–5;
Hendrickx 1994, pp. 26–27.
This charming predynastic female
figurine was acquired by Jean Capart
(1877–1947) in 1909 from Muhammad
Mohassib (1843–1928), a well-known
Egyptian antiquities dealer in Luxor,
together with three other, less well
preserved anthropomorphic figures
(E.3005, E.3007 and E.3008). It testifies
to the great interest of Jean Capart,
the then curator of the Egyptian
collection of the Musées Royaux d’Art
et d’Histoire in Brussels, in prehistoric
Egypt, which was manifested already
in his pioneering and much acclaimed
1904 monograph
Débuts de l’art
en Égypte
(translated in English in
1905 as
Primitive Art in Egypt
). As
the figurine is unprovenanced and its
archaeological context unknown, its
age is uncertain. It is, however, likely
that it originates in the late Naqada
I or early Naqada II period (ca. 3450–
3300 BC).
The figurine, originally incomplete,
was provided with a substitute left
arm, undoubtedly modelled on the
basis of the intact right arm. The
whole restoration was executed in a
rather awkward way, and it is highly
likely that, originally, the posture of
the arms was much more symmetrical.
The upper part of the body tilts
slightly forward and the back is
markedly arched. The head of the
figurine is provided with a downwardly
curved beaklike protuberance, like
several others figures of the period,
hence referred to as “bird women”.
Both arms, raised above the head,
end in hands turned in towards the
head, with fingers separately modelled
(insofar as the reconstruction of the
left arm is more or less correct). The
breasts are large and pendulous,
the stomach protruding, the hips
wide and the buttocks, divided by
an incision, firmly pronounced. The
legs, also delineated by a central
groove on the front and the back,
are vertically extended. The feet are
rudimentarily modelled and flexed
upwards. No trace of any original
colour survives.
Few examples of such figurines
have actually been recovered from
controlled excavations. Even though
some have been found in habitation
sites, such as Mahasna and Zawaydah
(Naqada), it is highly likely that the
majority come from tombs. Much
has been written on their possible
significance. They have been variously
interpreted as mother goddesses,
female fertility idols, concubines for
the deceased, dancers, celebrants,
wailing women and representations
of the
ka
or life force. However,
most of these interpretations
reason backwards in time from later,
Pharaonic iconography. The fact that
figurines of this type do not aim at
imitating human reality, but combine
human features with avian (the head)
and bovine (the posture of the arms)
elements, makes them an integrant
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