带盖卡诺皮克罐

New Kingdom, Amarna Period
ca. 1349–1330 B.C. or shortly thereafter
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 121
这只装盛内脏的华丽容器连同其他三只(目前在开罗)一起都是在国王谷第55号陵墓中出土的,它们置身于一批令人困惑不解的为阿肯那顿家族成员所造的随葬品中。学者解密了四个罐子上被擦除的名字,认为是阿肯那顿的第二位妻子姬雅。不过,四只盖子都与罐体有些不搭配,可能它们原本并不属于彼此。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 带盖卡诺皮克罐
  • 年代: 新王国时期,第十八王朝,阿肯那顿在位期间
  • 创作日期: 约公元前1352–1336年
  • 地域: 底比斯,国王谷,KV55号墓
  • 材料: 埃及雪花石膏,蓝玻璃,黑曜石,不明石材
  • 尺寸: 盖高71⁄8 英寸(18.2厘米),直径 63⁄8 英寸(16.3厘米),罐高201⁄2 英寸(52.1厘米)
  • 来源信息: 西奥多·M·戴维斯捐赠,1907年;西奥多·M·戴维斯收藏,西奥多·M·戴维斯遗赠,1915年
  • 藏品编号: 30.8.54
  • Curatorial Department: Egyptian Art

Audio

仅适用于: English
Cover Image for 3455. Canopic Jar with a Lid in the Shape of a Royal Woman's Head

3455. Canopic Jar with a Lid in the Shape of a Royal Woman's Head

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Egyptian sculptors always excelled in carving alabaster, and this is an unsurpassed masterpiece of the genre. The semi-translucent wig throws a subdued shadow on the slender neck. Its tiered sides and heavy top emphasize the slenderness and delicacy of the face. And the eyebrow- and eye-inlays of blue glass, gray stone, alabaster and obsidian add color to the honey and cream of the stone. The expression is dignified and alert, and the face has a youthful glow suffuses the face.

The vase comes from one of the most hotly debated archaeological finds in all of Egypt: Tomb 55 in the Valley of the Kings. When it was discovered, the tomb contained a jumble of remains from two royal burials that seem to have found a final repository in Tomb 55 after the turmoils at the end of the Amarna period. This vessel is one of four canopic jars—or containers for the viscera of a mummy—from Tomb 55.

The much discussed question is: whose image does the bust-shaped lid reproduce? When Egyptologists deciphered the erased inscription on the jar itself, they identified the original owner of the vessel bodies as the minor queen Kiya, the secondary wife of Akhenaten. Kiya may have been of foreign origin. According to some scholars, she was the mother of Tutankhamun. But even if the jar originally belonged to Kiya, the lid might not have. Look how awkwardly it sits on the jar. It’s possible that the lid was made for a different vessel, whose owner we do not know. At one time or another, scholars to identified the head on the lid as almost every player in the Amarna drama. It’s even possible that the lid was used for several of these people consecutively. But whomever it represents, the image is a singular work of art.

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