AN ANATOLIAN MARBLE FEMALE IDOL
AN ANATOLIAN MARBLE FEMALE IDOL
AN ANATOLIAN MARBLE FEMALE IDOL
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These lots have been imported from outside the EU … Read more PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION
AN ANATOLIAN MARBLE FEMALE IDOL

EARLY CHALCOLITHIC PERIOD, CIRCA MID-6TH MILLENNIUM B.C.

Details
AN ANATOLIAN MARBLE FEMALE IDOL
EARLY CHALCOLITHIC PERIOD, CIRCA MID-6TH MILLENNIUM B.C.
The schematic corpulent figure with a globular body, the short, thick neck with a pronounced double chin merging with the oblong head, the round face with a wide chin below the small, straight mouth, the cheeks full and fleshy, the eyes large and almond-shaped, with thick lids beneath modelled arching brows that merge with the bridge of the straight, triangular nose, the ears indicated by vertical raised ovals protruding from either side of the head, each notched, a peaked cap worn high above the large forehead
7 in. (18.2 cm.) high
Provenance
Private collection, USA, mid 1970s.
New York art market.
Private collection, Switzerland.
New York art market, acquired from the above in 1999.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, New York, 6 December 2007, lot 52.
Private collection, USA.
Special notice
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

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Katharine Cooke
Katharine Cooke

Lot Essay

The tradition of schematic human idols in Neolithic and early Chalcolithic Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) provides an insight into the enormous importance placed on female fertility by the early farming societies of this civilisation. The surviving idols, usually sculpted in clay or stone, are almost always female, often with a pronounced feminine physicality, or, as here, an exaggerated, corpulent figural form, which should be understood as an indicator of the potency of the female. For these early farming communities, fertility and fecundity, of both themselves and the earth they worked, was of paramount concern, determining their very survival. “Woman” was acknowledged as having ‘power over birth, life and death…(hence) as the embodiment of divine creation, the woman was the central figure in the first religion devised by mankind’ (G. Renda (ed.), Woman in Anatolia: 9000 Years of the Anatolian Woman, Istanbul, 1993, p. 11).

Idols and figurines which honoured the woman-goddess were probably used in rituals, or left at shrines. The numerous stone and clay figurines discovered at Catalhöyük, the largest settlement discovered thus far belonging to the Anatolian Ceramic Neolithic period, are well known. The most famous is a baked clay figurine of an extremely fleshy woman, seated on a throne flanked by panthers, who is giving birth – she is the mother-goddess, the ‘most important element’ of the religion of the region (E. Uzunoğlu, ibid., p. 20).

The present lot is one of the best surviving examples of the early Chalcolithic period, with the lively face preserving her character. The closest parallel to the present lot is a marble female figure, also dating to the mid-6th Millennium B.C., currently in the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations in Ankara (inv. no. 78-65-65). Of similar scale, with a comparably corpulent form, the round face, full cheeks, long oval eyes, straight nose, incised horizontal mouth and curved ears are strikingly similar. Notably, the Ankara example appears to be unfinished, with some parts only roughly worked; the body of the present lot should perhaps also be considered unfinished.

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