Légende
Figurine of the goddess Isis nursing Horus, Isis mythology, Horus mythology, uraeus, hieroglyphs, goddesses, Egyptian deities, Egyptian art, Egyptian sculpture. The figurine depicts a seated Isis with the child Horus on her lap. Isis supports Horus with her left hand and offers him her breast with her right. Isis is dressed in a narrow, close-fitting robe. On her head is a fragment of the base of a crown. Horus is naked; his neck is adorned, and his head bears a lock of youth hanging from the right side and a uraeus placed above his forehead. On the base of the figurine is a hieroglyphic votive text. 525–343 BC; Late Period, 27th–30th Dynasty, Egypt. Sculpture; height 21.7 cm, width 7 cm, depth 10.5 cm, weight 1.22 kg., A dark brown bronze statuette of a seated adult figure wearing a tall headdress and a patterned collar holds a smaller nude child figure on their lap; the adult has elongated hair or a wig falling to the shoulders and a calm facial expression with light-colored inlaid eyes, while the child looks upward with a small curled lock on the forehead and relaxed limbs. The adult sits with one arm across the chest and the other supporting the child, and both figures rest on a rectangular base that is slightly darker with carved incisions on its sides. The sculpture is displayed on a clear support against a light gray background, and visible colors include dark brown, lighter brown highlights, and pale tones in the eye inlays and the gray background.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A03_277
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
54.2Mo (2.5Mo) / 26.7cm x 50.8cm / 3159 x 6000 (300dpi)