编号 83491241

已不存在
古埃及 石头 雕塑家的克雷杜安赫(伊姆霍特普的母亲)模型浮雕。托勒密时期,公元前 332 - 30 年。高 6.9 厘米。
竞投已结束
1周前

古埃及 石头 雕塑家的克雷杜安赫(伊姆霍特普的母亲)模型浮雕。托勒密时期,公元前 332 - 30 年。高 6.9 厘米。

Sculptor's Model Relief with Khereduankh (imhotep's mother). Very rare depiction! Ancient Egypt, Ptolemaic Period, 323 - 30 BC. Limestone Height 6.9 cm, 6.6 cm length. PROVENANCE: Private collection, Switzerland. Acquired around 2000. CONDITION: Good condition. Khereduankh, the mother of Imhotep in late beliefs, received divine status like her son. Typically she wears on her short rounded hairstyle the feather crown and double uraei of an Egyptian queen-like goddess, and carries a queen's flywhisk scepter. Imhotep was an Egyptian chancellor to the Pharaoh Djoser, possible architect of Djoser's step pyramid, and high priest of the sun god Ra at Heliopolis. These are rectangular plaques or rounded sculptures on a small scale, between thirty and eight centimetres in height, sculpted in white limestone and with one characteristic in common: an unfinished aspect. They are practice or studio pieces, intended to help improve the chiseling technique of the trainee sculptor. The rounded form Egyptian sculptures are mainly heads or busts of royalty although a small number have been found representing private citizens or deities, while others are simply profiles. Apart from the heads, there are many models of feet, in most cases of the left foot. This is presumably because in Egyptian statues it is this foot and leg which lead as if in forward movement, and therefore the left is the most visible foot. Hands, arms, legs and to a lesser degree, torsos, have also been carved and, many of them, very realistically. In the same way there are animals and parts of animals, above all, the front part. This is the case of the lion: the head of this animal was used during this period of Greek domination as a decorative architectural element. An example of this are the two lion heads found in the back wall of the Dendera Temple. But there are also examples of other animals like the ram, bull, monkey, cat, horse and falcon. Among the reliefs used as sculptor’s models we find a greater variety of examples. Once more, royal figures are the dominant ones with heads, busts and almost complete figures. But the individual forms of hieroglyphs - animals and birds – are equally common. There can also be found a selection of private individuals, gods (most of which are profiles of goddesses with vulture heads), sacred symbols and parts of bodies. In many cases in which only the head of an animal is depicted, the piece is intended to represent the deity with which the animal is associated. This is evident from the presence of human shoulders, or from the wig that covers the hair or from the extra set of horns over the head, as seen in the relief of the head of the ram god Khnum. This leads us to see divine representations in other animal reliefs where there are no human elements, only those of the animals. No Egyptian works were left in this incomplete state unless this was done deliberately. Works were always finished. In this typology of models some can be found with wider and straighter chiseling demarcating the forms, while others show no obvious marks from chiseling although the surface is not perfectly smooth and finished. In most of the busts of pharaohs, vertical and horizontal marks can be seen, used by the artisans to mark out in grid form the different parts of the face and in this way to achieve symmetry. In Egyptian art these grids, be they on reliefs or sculptures, are marked out with red or black paint to outline the proportions of the figure following the canon used at that time. These markings disappeared later leaving only the final finished piece visible. There are short lines that mark the location of individual characteristics like eyes, the nose, the mouth, the chin, etc. In many examples these marks are made in the back and lateral sections, to act as a guide during the sculpting of the front area. In pieces depicting royalty in particular these grids are incised and have not been removed, so that the modeling can be clearly seen. This is what most clearly indicates the “practice piece” nature of the work. Further evidence is the lack of painted examples. It was the usual practice for a limestone sculpture to be polychrome, and in the model pieces there is no evidence of such painting at all, not even to mark out lines of expression or concealing the subtleties of the carving. The sculptor did not finish such pieces in polychrome to highlight his work, his design, his hand. This is the clearest evidence that shows that these pieces were for training purposes or to serve the sculptor as a model. For the Egyptians the representation of an object or an entity in any medium gave it life and was identified with the object or royal personage. This meant that works were never left unfinished unless this was for a specific reason, as is the case when they were carried out as practice so that the artisan could become adept and his work achieve a degree of perfection to the point where he could really be considered a true sculptor. Notes: - The piece includes authenticity certificate. - The piece includes Spanish Export License. - The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

编号 83491241

已不存在
古埃及 石头 雕塑家的克雷杜安赫(伊姆霍特普的母亲)模型浮雕。托勒密时期,公元前 332 - 30 年。高 6.9 厘米。

古埃及 石头 雕塑家的克雷杜安赫(伊姆霍特普的母亲)模型浮雕。托勒密时期,公元前 332 - 30 年。高 6.9 厘米。

Sculptor's Model Relief with Khereduankh (imhotep's mother). Very rare depiction!

Ancient Egypt, Ptolemaic Period, 323 - 30 BC.

Limestone

Height 6.9 cm, 6.6 cm length.

PROVENANCE: Private collection, Switzerland. Acquired around 2000.

CONDITION: Good condition.

Khereduankh, the mother of Imhotep in late beliefs, received divine status like her son. Typically she wears on her short rounded hairstyle the feather crown and double uraei of an Egyptian queen-like goddess, and carries a queen's flywhisk scepter.

Imhotep was an Egyptian chancellor to the Pharaoh Djoser, possible architect of Djoser's step pyramid, and high priest of the sun god Ra at Heliopolis.

These are rectangular plaques or rounded sculptures on a small scale, between thirty and eight centimetres in height, sculpted in white limestone and with one characteristic in common: an unfinished aspect. They are practice or studio pieces, intended to help improve the chiseling technique of the trainee sculptor.

The rounded form Egyptian sculptures are mainly heads or busts of royalty although a small number have been found representing private citizens or deities, while others are simply profiles. Apart from the heads, there are many models of feet, in most cases of the left foot. This is presumably because in Egyptian statues it is this foot and leg which lead as if in forward movement, and therefore the left is the most visible foot. Hands, arms, legs and to a lesser degree, torsos, have also been carved and, many of them, very realistically. In the same way there are animals and parts of animals, above all, the front part. This is the case of the lion: the head of this animal was used during this period of Greek domination as a decorative architectural element. An example of this are the two lion heads found in the back wall of the Dendera Temple. But there are also examples of other animals like the ram, bull, monkey, cat, horse and falcon.

Among the reliefs used as sculptor’s models we find a greater variety of examples. Once more, royal figures are the dominant ones with heads, busts and almost complete figures. But the individual forms of hieroglyphs - animals and birds – are equally common. There can also be found a selection of private individuals, gods (most of which are profiles of goddesses with vulture heads), sacred symbols and parts of bodies. In many cases in which only the head of an animal is depicted, the piece is intended to represent the deity with which the animal is associated. This is evident from the presence of human shoulders, or from the wig that covers the hair or from the extra set of horns over the head, as seen in the relief of the head of the ram god Khnum. This leads us to see divine representations in other animal reliefs where there are no human elements, only those of the animals.

No Egyptian works were left in this incomplete state unless this was done deliberately. Works were always finished. In this typology of models some can be found with wider and straighter chiseling demarcating the forms, while others show no obvious marks from chiseling although the surface is not perfectly smooth and finished. In most of the busts of pharaohs, vertical and horizontal marks can be seen, used by the artisans to mark out in grid form the different parts of the face and in this way to achieve symmetry. In Egyptian art these grids, be they on reliefs or sculptures, are marked out with red or black paint to outline the proportions of the figure following the canon used at that time. These markings disappeared later leaving only the final finished piece visible. There are short lines that mark the location of individual characteristics like eyes, the nose, the mouth, the chin, etc. In many examples these marks are made in the back and lateral sections, to act as a guide during the sculpting of the front area. In pieces depicting royalty in particular these grids are incised and have not been removed, so that the modeling can be clearly seen. This is what most clearly indicates the “practice piece” nature of the work. Further evidence is the lack of painted examples. It was the usual practice for a limestone sculpture to be polychrome, and in the model pieces there is no evidence of such painting at all, not even to mark out lines of expression or concealing the subtleties of the carving. The sculptor did not finish such pieces in polychrome to highlight his work, his design, his hand. This is the clearest evidence that shows that these pieces were for training purposes or to serve the sculptor as a model.

For the Egyptians the representation of an object or an entity in any medium gave it life and was identified with the object or royal personage. This meant that works were never left unfinished unless this was for a specific reason, as is the case when they were carried out as practice so that the artisan could become adept and his work achieve a degree of perfection to the point where he could really be considered a true sculptor.



Notes:
- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

设置搜索提醒
设置搜索提醒,以便在有新匹配项目时随时收到通知。

该物品出现在

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

如何在Catawiki上购买

详细了解我们的买家保障

      1. 发现奇珍异品

      饱览数以千计的专家精选的稀奇物品。查看每件稀奇物品的照片、详情和估价。 

      2. 设置最高出价

      找到您喜欢的物品并设置最高出价。您可以关注拍卖直到最后,也可以让系统为您出价。您只需设置可接受的最高出价。 

      3. 安全支付

      当您付款拍下心仪的稀奇物品后,我们会确保货款的安全,直至物品安然交付与您。我们使用受信赖的支付系统来处理所有交易。 

有类似的东西要出售吗?

无论您是在线拍卖的新手还是专业销售,我们都可以帮助您为您的独特物品赚取更多收入。

出售您的物品