Osiris

Late Period–Ptolemaic Period
664–30 B.C.
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 130
Osiris, foremost of the Egyptian funerary gods and ruler of the underworld, stands upright and wears an atef crown with a sun disk on top and ram horns below. His facial features are sensitively modeled with plastic brows and thick, heavy eyelids. His close-fitting mummiform garment has a shallow stiff upper edge along the back of the neck, a feature that occurs with some regularity on this garment, but one with an unclear meaning. His hands and wrists, complete with bracelets, extend out from curved slits in his garment. He holds the royal crook and flail with his hands poised asymmetrically.
In general, Osiris statuettes were some of the most abundant temple offerings in Egypt by the first millennium B.C., reflecting both the god’s importance and changing cult practices that spurred the wide-scale dedication of deity statuettes. Many statues of Osiris were offered in temples and shrines belonging to him, but they have also been found in other contexts, for example near temples and shrines honoring other prominent deities or in animal necropoleis.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Osiris
  • Period: Late Period–Ptolemaic Period
  • Date: 664–30 B.C.
  • Geography: From Egypt
  • Medium: Cupreous metal
  • Dimensions: H. 17.7 cm (6 15/16 in.); W. 4.5 cm (1 3/4 in.); D. 6.3 cm (2 1/2 in.)
    H. (with tang): 19 cm (7 1/2 in.)
  • Credit Line: Gift of Darius Ogden Mills, 1904
  • Object Number: 04.2.440
  • Curatorial Department: Egyptian Art

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