The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Bowl with Human Feet
ca. 3900–3650 B.C.
In the Predynastic Period, potters created a wide variety of ceramic vessels. One unusual type is a bowl with supports shaped like human feet. This simple, round bowl, tipped slightly forward as if to offer its contents, has two such feet solidly attached to its underside. Made from Nile clay, the bowl has a smoothed, slipped, and polished surface, giving it a light sheen. The bowl standing on feet is very similar in form to the Egyptian hieroglyph meaning "to bring." Since none of the known bowls of this type comes from a well-understood context, archaeologists cannot interpret their original use. Perhaps vessels like this were placed above a tomb to present offerings from the living to the deceased, a practice that was an established part of funerary ritual in pharaonic Egypt. Alternatively, they may have held offerings to a deity in his shrine.
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 101
Period: Predynastic, Late Naqada l–Naqada II
Date: ca. 3900–3650 B.C.
Geography: From Egypt
Medium: Pottery (red polished ware)
Dimensions: diam. 13.2 x W. 13.7 x D. 9.8 cm (5 3/16 x 5 3/8 x 3 7/8 in.)
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1910
Accession Number: 10.176.113
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/547212
يوجد بمدينة نيويورك، يعتبر من أشهر و أضخم متاحف العالم، يحتوى على اثار من جميع الحضارات وهو يفوق اللوفر بمراحل من حيث الضخامة. إقرأ المزيد
حقوق الطبع والنشر جميع الصور الاطلاع على هذا الموقع من قبل أصحابها. النقر على اسم المؤلف أعلاه سوف يأخذك إلى الصفحة الأصلية للصورة معينة حيث يمكنك التحقق من معلومات حقوق النشر من المؤلف.
يتم توفير بعض الصور عبر فليكر، 500px، إينستاجرام وغيرها من واجهات برمجة التطبيقات المفتوحة في الامتثال الكامل للشروط والاحكام المناسبة.