Ritual Figure
Ritual Figure
Published 2019-09-03T08:12:40+00:00
The fluid pose and chest-beating gesture of this extraordinary figure evoke a stately performance. Egyptian relief representations depict such figures as part of a troupe of similarly genuflecting divine beings with falcon and jackal heads. This troupe is usually seen attending the sunrise or the birth and coronation of a king; three-dimensional figures of the same type were set around the processional shrines of certain gods, doubtlessly to accompany the epiphany of the deity during a procession.
It is not easy to explain the presence among the animal-headed divinities of the human-headed figure wearing—as seen here—the regalia of a pharaoh. Some scholars interpret the figure as the representation of an actual king. Others understand it as a mythical being that introduces royal aspects into the otherworldly ritual. Whatever its exact meaning, this masterpiece of wood carving was certainly part of a temple's equipment. Its ritual character was further emphasized by a covering of lead sheet, now vanished.
Date published | 03/09/2019 |
Complexity | Medium |
Title | Ritual Figure |
Date | 380–246 B.C. |
Dimension | H. 21 cm (8 1/4 in.); W. 14.3 cm (5 5/8 in.); D. 11 cm (4 5/16 in.) |
Accession | 2003.154 |
Period | Dynasty 30 or later |
Medium | Wood, formerly clad with lead sheet |
Credit | Purchase, Anne and John V. Hansen Egyptian Purchase Fund, and Magda Saleh and Jack Josephson Gift, 2003 |
Record | https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/547689 |
Artist | Unknown artist |
Place | Metropolitan Museum of Art |