171
170
45
Standing feMale figure
WitH croSSed arMS
Egypt, Hierakonpolis, “Main Deposit”,
Temple enclosure
Naqada II – Early Dynastic period
(ca. 3300–3000/2900 BC)
Lapis lazuli and wood, H. 8.9 cm
The visitors of the Ashmolean Museum
of Art and Archaeology – University of
Oxford, Oxford AN1896–1908 E.1057
(body; Egyptian Research Account
excavations conducted by Quibell
and Green, 1898) and E.1057a (head;
University of Liverpool excavations
conducted by Garstang and Jones,
1906)
Ashmolean Museum of Art and
Archaeology – University of Oxford,
gift Harold Jones (head) AN 1896-1908
E1057-1057 A
Bibliography:
Patch 2011, no. 172.
This remarkable little statuette is
carved from beautiful blue lapis lazuli.
Egypt’s closest known source for this
semi-precious
stone is Badakhshan
in Afghanistan, a distance of some
3,600 km, making it one of the most
exotic and highly prized materials
used by the ancient Egyptians. In
dynastic times, the bodies of gods
were described as being made of
“pure lapis lazuli” and this exquisite
stone therefore evoked the divine.
It first became common in Egypt
during the predynastic period when
it was imported to create prestigious
objects, particularly beads and inlays,
included among the grave goods
buried with members of the elite. The
statuette from Hiérakonpolis is the
largest piece of crafted lapis lazuli to
have survived from this early time.
The story of the statuette’s discovery
is almost as remarkable as the object
itself. The body was discovered by
James Quibell during excavations
at Hiérakonpolis (one of the most
significant archaeological sites for
the formation of ancient Egyptian
civilisation) beneath a mud brick wall
south of the so-called “Main Deposit”.
This large cache of discarded votive
objects included some of the most
iconic works
of predynastic and early
dynastic art that had been gathered
together and ritually deposited within
the later temple enclosure.
A small wooden peg was preserved
at the figure’s neck for the attachment
of the head, which incredibly was
found eight years later, during
further excavations in the same area
conducted by Harold Jones. While
the stone used for the body has
a mottled appearance (with white
and gold flecks of calcite and pyrite
respectively), the head is of the
rarer and “pure” deep blue variety.
Whether this difference was by design
or the result of damage requiring a
replacement head is not clear. Some
have even suggested the body was
made outside Egypt, perhaps in the
region of the Persian Gulf, and the
head added after its arrival in Egypt.
The figure’s face is dominated by
large eyes that are deeply recessed
for inlay with another material. Her
arms are bent at the elbows with her
hands clasped,
right over left, across
the abdomen. Her nude body is quite
summarily carved except for the pubic
area, which is indicated by a series of
small circular depressions. The legs,
slightly bent at the knees, terminate in
a straight edge just above the ankles.
A drilled hole on the underside (now
obscured by the modern mount) may
have served to fasten the figure to a
base, or to attach separately modelled
feet. It has also been suggested that
the figurine was meant to be the
handle for a spoon.
Debate still rages about the figurine’s
identity and origin. James Quibell
was the first to point out its “non-
Egyptian” appearance, comparing it
to the marble Cycladic figurines found
on the Greek Islands of the Aegean
Sea dating to around 2500 BC.
Others have compared the pose to
female figures from Iran dating to the
later second millennium BC, several
hundred years after the supposed
date of the lapis lazuli statuette. The
figure’s short, tightly curled hair as well
as the position of her arms and hands
are unique among the statuettes from
the “Main Deposit” at Hiérakonpolis
(the majority carved in ivory)
and find
few parallels in early Egyptian art.
Several ivory and bone statuettes
originally in the collection of the
Reverend William MacGregor depict
women with their hands crossed in a
similar gesture, but questions surround
their authenticity. The same curled
hairstyle seen, for example, on figures
decorating contemporary siltstone
cosmetic palettes lends support to
the suggestion that the statuette was
carved in Egypt. Whatever the case,
the object – whether fully finished, or
as a block of raw material – travelled a
considerable distance before arriving
at ancient Hiérakonpolis and therefore
provides valuable evidence of early
Egypt’s place in an increasingly
interconnected world.
McN.L.
46
Standing nude Male figure
Egypt
Old Kingdom (ca. 2500 BC)
Wood, H. 33 cm
Private Collection, Paris
By the IV–V dynasty, not only the
pharaoh but also private people of
high rank could build themselves
a monumental
tomb and funerary
chapel. Statues in stone or wood
depicted the deceased and his
household, as they were in their
lifetime, and received offerings
from the living. This nude, youthful
figure is probably an attendant or a
servant; the deceased would have
been wearing a linen kilt. The slender,
elegant body is typical of the aesthetic
standard introduced by the Egyptian
Old Kingdom, that is, idealized reality.
C.A.
ELIMINARE BASE DI LEGNO
175
174
Standing SteatopygeouS
figure
Southwest Arabia
IV millennium BC
Private Collection, Paris
(cat. 49, detail)
Anthropomorphic fiGureS
from prehiStoric ArABiA
T
he caravan kingdoms of Saba, which appeared in the first millennium Bc,
have long been thought to mark the earliest civilizations of pre-islamic Ara-
bia. however, the discoveries of statues and steles from archaeological sites
in the northwest in the area of Al-‘ulà, in central Arabia at ha’il, in the hadramawt
at rawk, set back the chronology to the fourth–third millennia. the exploration of
eastern Arabia and the Gulf brought to light a local culture which thrived on the
maritime trade between the land of Sumer in mesopotamia
and the indus at the time
of the harappa civilization. Ancient sites at Al- Aïn, umm an-nar, on the islands of
tarut and Bahrain yielded remains of monumental architecture and figurative arts,
notably on stamp seals.
At the end of the fourth millennium, across the whole of Arabia, late neolithic soci-
eties underwent major changes, similar to those which were occurring in the levant,
egypt and mesopotamia. the beginning of the Bronze Age increased communica-
tions with neighbouring regions, in answer to the growing needs of the metallurgic
industry and the demand for raw materials on the part of the emerging complex
societies of the near east. monumental architecture, cultic places and built tombs
appeared in a number of sedentary centres throughout the peninsula. petroglyphs
were engraved by tradesmen and travellers along the caravan routes. cultic centres
associated with funerary precincts have yielded statues and steles of male figures.
female steatopygous statuettes are carved out of coloured stones. Although these
artistic forms originate from different regions separated by great distances, they show
a remarkable aesthetic unity which is a characteristic of prehistoric Arabia. different
stones were used to carve these sculptures,
reflecting on the geological diversity of
the land, from black basalt, originating in the volcanic regions of the west, to the
reddish limestone of the Hadramawt, the sandstone of the northwest, or the granite
pebbles from the crystalline substratum in the west.
the male statues are standing, their body is elongated, the legs are separated. Above
a strong neck, the
head is small, the face is rendered as a flat mask applied to the
head; eyes and nose are delineated but not the mouth. they wear a belt and a baldric
across the chest. it is not clear if they were otherwise fully clothed, but this what was
probably intended as their genitals are never apparent. on the rock engravings, the
male figures are shown in action, hunting animals and displaying their weapons – bow,
spear and dagger – the crescent-shaped pommel of the dagger belongs to a well-known
type used over a large part of the near east and egypt during the third millennium
177
176
Bc, an indication for the date of those rock engravings and the standing stone statues.
they are usually interpreted as funerary images or ancestor figures.
the female figures, on the contrary, are always naked and adhere to traditions
inherited from the paleolithic-neolithic eras. their whole outline tends to be enclosed
in a simple geometric shape, ovoid or cubic, with shortened legs, enhanced buttocks
and belly, small head. What may look at first sight like a realistic rendering of an
obese woman is in fact the result of a careful construction of abstract volumes, based
on quadrangular or spherical modules assembled in well-balanced proportions. the
lower part of the statuettes from the hadramawt is shaped as a cube, possibly indicat-
ing the figure is seated on a stool. the arms are crossed at the waist, in a static and
majestic attitude. As in the male statues, the face often appears like a mask applied
to the head, with a continuous eyebrow line. the female statuettes, never found in
context, are, expectedly, interpreted as fertility figures.
So far, there is no well documented association between the male and the female
figures. But stylistic details,
such as the rendering of the
flat mask-like face and the
continuous eyebrows, point to their belonging to the same horizon, and it may be
assumed that similar stones indicate a similar origin.
dead warriors are shown with the majesty of divinized ancestors; childbear-
ing women appear in the abstract ideal of eternal womanhood. these images step
across the barriers that separate the human and the supra human worlds, life and
death. Considered together, as complementary and contrasting concepts, the male
and female images open a larger vista on the complex nature of pre-islamic Arabia.
A.C.
AL-’ULÂ
92 cm
HA’IL
85 cm
HA’IL
57 cm
HA’IL
100 cm
RIQSEH
<100 cm
JAWF
40.5 cm
JAWF
24 cm
JAWF
26 cm
JAWF
31 cm
MAREB
33 cm
MAREB
27.5 cm
WÂDÎ SULAYH
25 cm
RAWK
31.7 cm
RAWK
26.2 cm
RAWK
21.5 cm
RAWK
20.9 cm
RAWK
17.5 cm
Yemen
Saudi Arabia
0
500 km
Jordan
1
Distribution of anthropomorphic
figures from Arabia, IV–III millennia BC
(after Steimer-Herbert et al. 2007)
2
Stele statue of male wearing a baldric
Al-Ma’Akir – Qaryat al-Kaafa, Hail
(Southern Arabia)
IV millennium BC
Sandstone
National Museum, Riyad
100>
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