Head of a Female Figure from the Tomb of Khety

Middle Kingdom

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 107

Herbert E. Winlock, the Museum's field director at Thebes, identified this head as an image of the treasurer Khety in whose tomb it was found. Comparisons to complete figures with similar close-fitting, short hair determined, however, that this head belonged to a female figure. The woman was most probably nude, and the absence of a wig and garment made her a representative of femininity in general. Her presence among Khety's burial equipment provided him not with a concubine (another out-dated interpretation), but with the means to be reborn after death.

The figure's head is a masterpiece of wood carving. Rounded cheeks, "love rings" on the neck, a dimpled chin, a smiling mouth, and the minutely modeled tiny curls of her hair combine to form an image of irresistible charm. The eyes must have been inlaid, and the eyebrows are still filled with dark paste; there are remains of black paint on the hair.

Head of a Female Figure from the Tomb of Khety, Wood, paint and paste fill

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