Légende
Ushabti Cha-em-uase, Cha-em-uase private name. A mummy-shaped figurine ushabti made of faience and pressed into a mold. Details of the face, jewelry, and bag are painted. Hands folded across the chest—right over left. Wide bracelets on the wrists. An ush necklace on the chest. No tools in the hands, a bag on the back. A three-part wig, combed into strips, with borders at the ends. Painted inscription of three lines placed on the legs: Shd Osiris Cha-em-Wese justified with his voice said: O — the beginning of the sixth chapter of the Book of the Dead. ca. 1295–1069 BC; New Kingdom, 19th–20th Dynasty, Egypt. Height 10.1 cm, width 4.1 cm., A small standing figurine displayed on a rectangular dark base, the figurine rendered in a turquoise blue material with areas of darker blue and greenish tones and some black and brown spots and traces; the figure is shown in profile with a smooth, elongated body, a rounded head with stylized hair or headdress that falls along the back, a simple facial profile, and indistinct limbs with the feet positioned on the base; the background is a flat neutral gray.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A02_125
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
68.7Mo (1.8Mo) / 33.9cm x 50.8cm / 4000 x 6000 (300dpi)