AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE HEAD OF THE GODDESS WADJET
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE HEAD OF THE GODDESS WADJET
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE HEAD OF THE GODDESS WADJET
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AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE HEAD OF THE GODDESS WADJET

LATE PERIOD, CIRCA 664-332 B.C.

細節
AN EGYPTIAN BRONZE HEAD OF THE GODDESS WADJET
LATE PERIOD, CIRCA 664-332 B.C.
4 ½ in. (11.4 cm.) high
來源
Charles Gillot (1853-1903), Paris; thence by descent (recorded as no. 95 on a dated 11 April 1903 inventory list of Gillot's collection).
Ancienne Collection Charles Gillot (1853-1903), Christie's, Paris, 4-5 March 2008, lot 127.
U.K. private collection, acquired from the above.
London art market, acquired from the above, 2018.
Antiquities, Christie's, New York, 28 October 2019 (unsold).
with David Aaron Ancient Arts, London.
Acquired by the current owner from the above, 2020.
展覽
Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins, 2020-2023 (Inv. no. MMoCA852).

榮譽呈獻

Claudio Corsi
Claudio Corsi Specialist, Head of Department

拍品專文

Wadjet was the tutelary deity of Lower (northern) Egypt, the area of the Nile Delta. She was one of the "Two Ladies," the vulture goddess Nekhbet being the other. Every Pharaoh included in his long and complicated titulary a "Two Ladies" name. This was usually listed second in the order of his titles. More commonly represented as a cobra or a woman with a cobra head, she was often represented as the uraeus, a rearing cobra on the crowns of pharaohs, signifying her role as a protector of kings and a guardian of the land. In some depictions however, the Egyptian goddess Wadjet is portrayed with a lioness head, symbolizing her fierce protective nature. This lion-headed form connects her to other warrior goddesses like Sekhmet, emphasizing her role as a guardian of pharaohs and the land of Lower Egypt. As a lioness, Wadjet embodies both the nurturing and defensive aspects of motherhood, fiercely protecting her people and the king. This duality highlights her powerful association with protection, warfare, and divine justice in ancient Egyptian mythology. For a seated bronze figure of Wadjet with similar uraeus, see an example in the Louvre Museum, inv. no. E 3791.

This Wadjet was formerly in the collection of Charles Gillot (1853-1903), a Parisian inventor and collector. Charles's father, Firmin, invented the gillotage, a photoengraving technique that allowed for the simultaneous printing of text and images. Charles improved this technology throughout his life while he also amassed an important collection of ancient, Islamic, Japanese and medieval works of art. The majority of Gillot's collection was dispersed at auction in 1904 by the Durand-Ruel gallery with a later sale, 104 years later, conducted by Christie's Paris.

更多來自 穆然古典藝術博物館珍藏古代文物

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