Légende
Ushabti of Semen-Ptah-Psamtyk. Wigs, funerary figurine mummy-shaped, hieroglyphs, beards facial hair, hoes, back pillar/pilaster. Semen-Ptah-Psamtyk ca. 747–332 BC. Book of the Dead motifs; grave goods. Standing on a base, supported at the back by a pillar. Hands crossed on the chest, right folded over left. In the right hand a hoe with a narrow blade; in the left hand a pickaxe. A basket slung on a single string over the left shoulder. Three-part wig styled in narrow strands ending in a horizontal hairline at the front. Chin tapers downward with braided curl; almond-shaped eyes, broad nose, full slightly pouty lips. Engraved inscription in eight lines around the figurine text begins: O you shabti! If Osiris Semen-Ptah-Psammetik, born of Har-pe-khrad-ankhet... to cultivate the field, to irrigate the bank, to transport sand from west to east and from east to west. Here I am, you will say.. 8 lines of text. 664–332 BC, Late Period, Egypt. Shabti. Height 19 cm; width 4.9 cm., A vertical statue of a standing human figure shown in profile on a rectangular base, rendered in a weathered turquoise-green material with areas of brownish wear; the figure wears a long, ribbed headdress and has stylized facial features with a prominent nose and chin, one arm bent across the chest and the other resting along the side, a long wrapped garment covering the body down to the feet, and shallow incised decorative markings along the length of the torso and legs; the base is a light tan wood block, and the background is a smooth neutral gray.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A18_188
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
47.9Mo (2.2Mo) / 23.6cm x 50.8cm / 2789 x 6000 (300dpi)