AN EGYPTIAN SANDSTONE TALATAT RELIEF WITH A BOWING PRIEST
AN EGYPTIAN SANDSTONE TALATAT RELIEF WITH A BOWING PRIEST
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PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTION
AN EGYPTIAN SANDSTONE TALATAT RELIEF WITH A BOWING PRIEST

NEW KINGDOM, 18TH DYNASTY, REIGN OF AKHENATEN, CIRCA 1351-1334 B.C.

Details
AN EGYPTIAN SANDSTONE TALATAT RELIEF WITH A BOWING PRIEST
NEW KINGDOM, 18TH DYNASTY, REIGN OF AKHENATEN, CIRCA 1351-1334 B.C.
11 in. (28 cm.) wide
Provenance
with Jean-Loup Despras, Paris.
Private Collection, Paris and Geneva, acquired from the above, 1983; thence by descent to the current owner.

Brought to you by

Rowena Field
Rowena Field Junior Specialist & Cataloguer

Lot Essay

Depicting a bald-headed priest performing a deep bow before the king, this fragment of a talatat block most likely derives from a scene of Akhenaten’s sed-festival, or jubilee ceremony. As reconstructed by D. Redford, and extensively studied by J. Gohary (Akhenaten’s Sed-Festival at Karnak), Akhenaten’s sed-festival scenes show participants wearing streamers similar to the one extending from the top of this courtier’s head (compare, for example, R.W. Smith and D B. Redford, The Akhenaten Temple Project. Volume 1: Initial Discoveries, pl. 52). Once part of Akhenaten’s Gem-pa-Aten temple at East Karnak, the complex was dismantled by Akhenaten’s successors, with the majority of the small blocks or talatat being reemployed in the foundations of various pylons at Karnak.

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