AN EGYPTIAN TERRACOTTA CANOPIC JAR FOR MENENA
PROPERTY FROM A NEW JERSEY PRIVATE COLLECTION
AN EGYPTIAN TERRACOTTA CANOPIC JAR FOR MENENA

NEW KINGDOM, 18TH DYNASTY, CIRCA 1550-1295 B.C.

細節
AN EGYPTIAN TERRACOTTA CANOPIC JAR FOR MENENA
NEW KINGDOM, 18TH DYNASTY, CIRCA 1550-1295 B.C.
10 7/8 in. (27.1 cm.) high
來源
Joseph W. Drexel (1833-1888), noted banker, philanthropist and book collector, New York and Philadelphia.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, gifted from the above, 1889 (accession no. 89.2.200a,b); deaccessioned 1956 and sold locally.
Mr. Robert C. Hartlein (1922-1988), New Jersey; thence by descent to his widow, Mrs. Jane Hartlein-Leef (1927-2016), Pennsylvania, 1988; thence by descent to the current owner, circa 1990.

拍品專文

This canopic jar is fashioned out of marl clay and the facial features displayed on the lid were most likely modeled by hand rather than mold-made. Stylistically, the facial features reflect the style of the early to mid-18th Dynasty sculpture.

The partially-preserved inscription on the body of jar reads, "Honoured of Hapi, Osiris, Menena beatified." Originally, Menena would have had four such jars, each intended to hold one of the four internal organs (lungs, liver, stomach, and intestines), which were removed during the mummification process. Close parallels in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art excavated from the Asasif region of western Thebes date mainly to the period of the 18th Dynasty from the reigns of Ahmose to Thutmose III.




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