Ivory figure of a woman with incised features
From Badari, Egypt
Badarian culture, around 4000 BC, Predynastic period
Height: 14 cm
Perhaps a fertility figurine
This type of figure is found in burials of both men and women of the Badarian culture (around 4000 BC), the earliest identifiable culture of the Predynastic period.
This is a fine example and is one of the earliest known sculptures from Egypt.
It is made from one of the lower canines of a hippopotamus, an animal that could still be found in Egypt at the time.
Ivory and bone were used extensively from the Predynastic period onwards for small objects such as beads, needles and combs.
The figure appears to be crudely made, but the carving is precise and the limbs are well formed and smoothly finished.
The emphasis on the eyes, breasts, hips and pubic area are stylistic rather than due to poor execution.
Similar figures, all of which focused on these areas, were made of clay, wood and stone.
This suggests that the figures might have been linked with sexuality, rather than being dolls, as was once supposed.
It now seems likely that these figures were linked with the rebirth and regeneration that the deceased hoped would transfer them to the Afterlife.
So-called paddle dolls probably fulfilled the same function in the Middle Kingdom (2040-1750 BC).
Gift of the British School of Archaeology in Egypt
[url=http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/compass/ixbin/goto?id=OBJ52]http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/
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Els ik heb deze afbeeldingen al geplaatst maar met veel minder gegevens. Deze zijn volgens mij natuurlijk beter, u als administrator zou een van de twee voorbeelden kunnen verwijderen daar tweemaal hetzelfde geen enkele zin heeft. De keus is volledig aan u. Mijn verontschuldingen voor de last die ik veroorzaak. (Ze mogen wel wat verkleind worden)
Edited By admin on 20 augustus 2003 at 16:54