辛努塞尔特三世面部雕像

Middle Kingdom
ca. 1878–1840 B.C.
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 111
这件面部石雕来自一座辛努塞尔特三世的雕像,它与对页那尊刻有同一位统治者名字的狮身人面像呈现出截然不同的面貌。狮身人面像上的肥胖脸颊显得疲惫,而这副面孔却清新有活力。狮身人面像上的杏眼较小,流露出险恶的目光,而这一面部雕像的双眼向下凝视,呈现出内向的表情,鼻梁上方深深的皱纹更增强了这一印象。最后,狮身人面像下垂的嘴角传达出怨恨的神情,与这件石英石面部雕像上温和、宽容的神情形成反差。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 辛努塞尔特三世面部雕像
  • 年代: 中王国时期,第十二王朝
  • 创作日期: 约公元前1878–1840年
  • 材料: 红石英石
  • 尺寸: 高61⁄2 英寸(16.5厘米)
  • 来源信息: 购买,爱德华·S·哈克尼斯捐赠,1926年
  • 藏品编号: 26.7.1394
  • Curatorial Department: Egyptian Art

Audio

仅适用于: English
Cover Image for 3345. Face of Senwosret III

3345. Face of Senwosret III

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NARRATOR: Take a moment to compare this remarkable fragment from a statue of King Senwosret III to the sphinx, nearby. The resemblance is striking—it’s obvious these pieces depict the same person—but there are important differences too. One important difference is, of course, the material. The brownish-reddish quartzite on this piece seems to glow from within, and gives it an amazing life-like quality.

Dorothea Arnold is Lila Acheson Wallace Curator in Charge of the Department of Egyptian Art.

DOROTHEA ARNOLD: You see this is the same man as the one depicted in the head of the sphinx. But, clearly, another artist is at work here. The king looks more benign, less forbidding. And instead of the brooding expression on the sphinx’s face we see a deeply thoughtful man. A king to whom one might indeed trust to lead the country in the right way.

Egyptian sculptors were especially naturalistic in works created from this brown crystalline stone: quartzite. Here it is almost uncanny how the artist conveyed real flesh in a human face. Senwosret the Third was a very effective ruler, who centralized everything that happened in Egypt in the power of the pharaoh, putting down feudal lords, and consolidating neighboring regions—especially the gold mines and other riches of Nubia, to the south of Egypt, which was controlled by a chain of military forts.

This realistic portrayal of the king’s rugged maturity may have had a political purpose. Earlier kings had assumed power by associating themselves with the gods. But psychological portraits like this one could have made Senwosret the Third ‘s earthly power frighteningly clear to his enemies as well as his subjects.

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