0 favorites     0 comments    335 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

art
Roman
NewYorkCity
Empire
Met
Egyptian
faience
MMA
MetropolitanMuseum
Manhattan
Egypt
2007
sculpture
museum
statue
ancient
NYC
NY
NewYork
FujiFinePixS6000fd


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

335 visits


Faience Ram with Lotus-Shaped Manger in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Sept. 2007

Faience Ram with Lotus-Shaped Manger in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Sept. 2007
Faience Group: Ram with Lotus-Shaped Manger; Two Theatrical Masks
2nd century AD
Said to be from Medinet el-Fayum (Arsinoe)

Accession Numbers: 26.7.1019-1021

This charming ram, with its almost prehensile muzzle, feeds from a lotus-form trough. The traditional Egyptian gods Amun or Khum were identified with curly-horned rams, but by this time several other divinities were as well. In terracotta statuettes and on coins Harpokrates can be seen riding a ram or sitting upon a lotus flower, the latter symbolic of rebirth. Perhaps this faience composition alludes to Harpokrates, who was an immensely popular god of fecundity and rebirth during the Roman era.

The pieces on view here are said to have been part of a find of numerous faience objects at Arsinoe, capital of the Fayum region.

Text abridged from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.

Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.