part of this myth, there appears a man,
often attacked or partially devoured,
carrying a vessel with the plant or
waters of life. Furthermore, a dream
is described in which snakes wrap
around a man whose body “vanishes”,
making it impossible to bury him.
More recently, the statuette of
a man devoured by snakes from
the Monastery of San Lazzaro has
been associated with a group of
sculptures known as
balafrés
in
French,
Narbenmänner
in German,
and
sfregiati
in Italian, which translates
as, “the scarred” (Vidale 2017, p.
198). There are sixteen of these
statuettes, made of a composite of
chlorite and limestone/marble of
unknown provenance, representing
free-standing men with scarred faces,
a single eye (the second eye being
an empty orbit), a beard similar to
that of our figurine, the body covered
with snake scales, and an object
interpreted as a jug under one arm.
2
Vidale’s interpretation is that the
balafrés
figurines represent an
ancient Indo-Iranian ancestor of Indra,
the hero of the Rig-Veda, slayer of
Vrtra, the celestial dragon that had
stopped the rains and devoured him
(represented by the skin covered with
scales that envelops the
balafrés
).
After slaying Vrtra, Indra pours the
redemptive waters from his jug onto
the surface of the land, restoring its
fertility. As for the provenance of the
balafrés
statuettes, Vidale theorizes
that these figurines have a funerary
function and were deposited between
2300 and 1800 BC in burials of the
Oxus culture (present-day Amu-
darya River) between Afghanistan,
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. He also
proposes that the representations of
the man imprisoned and devoured
by snakes of the Venetian statuette
should be associated with the
figurines of the
balafrés
, given the
similarity of their beards and the fact
that they are both holding vessels
and being devoured by snake/
dragons. Furthermore, he claims that
scars like those marking their faces
also are visible on the left cheek of
the man imprisoned by snakes, who
would thus belong to the category
of “the scarred” and could thus be
interpreted as a product of the Oxus
culture and dated to the same period
as the
balafrés
figurines.
In fact, what Vidale erroneously
interprets as three wavy scars on
the left cheek of the San Lazzaro
statuette also appear on the right
cheek. Rather than representing scars,
however, they clearly indicate the
man’s beard, who therefore cannot
be classified as one of “the scarred”.
Overall, the iconographic evidence
of a link between the
balafrés
figures
and our statuette seems too generic
and inconsistent to establish a solid
connection and place the San Lazzaro
figure in the context of the artistic
culture of the Oxus Valley.
On the contrary, the iconographic
motif – a bald, nude, kneeling man
with a vessel on his upper back whose
weight pushes his torso forward,
with his arms immobilized behind
his back devoured by two powerful
snakes – leads more convincingly to
attribute our sculpture to the broader
context of the small-sized statuary of
the Late Uruk – Jemdet-Nasr epoch.
As mentioned, iconographic parallels
with analogous representations of
nude, kneeling prisoners with their
arms tied behind their backs and
attacked by birds of prey or snakes
have been noted in a
series of relief
and freestanding figures as well as
in seal impressions from this period.
The attribution is also indicated by
the stylistic rendering of the figure
with its markedly plastic naturalism in
combination with the heavy rigidity of
the volumes of the body.
It is clearly possible and plausible
that this representation of a vessel
carrier imprisoned and devoured by
snakes should be associated with the
mythic narratives of Mesopotamia,
either known narratives, such as the
myth of Etana, or unknown ones.
Alternatively, it could be associated
with the broader mythological roots
spread through the vast regions
of Mesopotamia and central Asia.
Regardless, there are no specific
findings to date in this regard. Finally,
the high probability that chloritized
high-potassium trachyandesite
originated from the Zagros Mountains
of Iran suggests that the figurine from
the San Lazzaro collection belonged
to a Late Uruk or Proto-Elamite/
Susa III site in the Iranian highlands
or the Susiana plain, or perhaps
from a Sumerian centre in southern
Mesopotamia, where it could have
arrived along the long-distance
trade routes that connected Sumer
and Iran beginning in the late fourth
millennium BC.
M.B.D.
1
For a more in-depth discussion of the
statuette and its iconographic and stylistic
parallels, see Morandi Bonacossi 1996 and
2003.
2
For a synthesis of the interpretations
proposed to date to explain the meaning of
these statuettes, as heroes, mythic beings or
demons, see Vidale 2017, p
.
173.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |