Légende
Ushabti Wahibre-em-achet. Mummy-shaped funerary figurine shabti, ca. 664–525 BC, Late Period, 26th Dynasty, Egypt. Made of blue faience with black details. Stands on a base, supported by a pillar at the back. Arms crossed on the chest, right folded over left. From under the shroud only the hands clenched into fists are visible; right hand holds a hoe, left a pickaxe; a basket is slung over the left shoulder. Engraved tools. Smooth three-part wig with longer front strands than the back. Straight, braided beard. Large eyes and a mouth stretched in a slight smile. Engraved inscription arranged in a T-shape — one line running around the figure at hip level and one column on the front of the legs: Shd Osiris the father of God, priest ... Uah-ib-Re-em-achet born of Ta-net-Amun. Height 13.4 cm; width 3 cm., A small turquoise-blue figurine shaped like a standing mummiform person with a rounded head and stylized facial features, crossed arms, and a long narrow body; the surface shows some darker speckles and a few small areas of brownish discoloration, with the figurine set against a smooth neutral gray background.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A18_178
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
80.8Mo (891.5Ko) / 39.9cm x 50.8cm / 4708 x 6000 (300dpi)