Head of a goddess, probably Mut, for attachment to a processional barque (?)

Third Intermediate Period

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 125

Images of gods were carried out of temples on festival days on processional bark-shrines. Most often the image itself was concealed in a shrine, but sculpted heads at the prow and stern identified the god to the populace, royal statuary surrounded and protected the god hidden in the shrine, and other protective gods rode at the prow. This large female head was gilded and inlaid and originally wore the double crown of Amun's consort, Mut, as well as the double uraeus that was a hallmark of queenlike goddesses. Judging from the arrangement of the long front locks of her wig, this sculpture would have appeared at the prow of Mut's barque-shrine; if it had been intended for the stern, the hair would have projected forward, allowing it to fit along the horizontal surface of the barque in front of the goddess' head.

Head of a goddess, probably Mut, for attachment to a processional barque (?), Cupreous alloy, gold leaf, formerly inlaid

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