On view
Fresco of metalworkers from the Tomb of Nebamun at Thebes,
ca. 1385–1370 BCE
The survival of objects associated with the creation of art offers important information on ancient modes of representation and production that were employed by Egyptian artisans, whose identities and methods have not otherwise survived in the historical record. Molds could be used to make multiple iterations of the same object, as seen with the mold for a fish amulet, while small models offered a physical example of an individual, object, or animal that could be replicated by numerous craftsmen at once. Some of these are more schematic, offering only a rough approximation of a form, while others are more precise, such as the model for the head of a pharaoh, which features the proper proportions, marked out on a grid, on the back of the head. There also survive examples of practice, where similar animals or bodies were repeatedly carved into stone as their makers perfected their technique.
Information
ca. 1385–1370 BCE
Africa, Egypt, Thebes, the Necropolis
- Norman de Garis Davies, The tomb of two sculptors at Thebes, (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1925). , p. 61-2, pls. XI-XIII
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The Carl Otto von Kienbusch, Jr. Memorial Collection (Princeton: Princeton University Art Museum, 1956)
, no. 40[? -obscured on card] - "Recent acquisitions," Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 15, no. 1 (1956): p. 26-27., p. 27
- William Kelly Simpson, "Reviewed work: Ancient art: The Norbert Schimmel Collection by Oscar White Muscarella ", American journal of archaeology 80, no. 3 (Summer, 1976)., p. 318
- Alisée Devillers, "Displaying Tools. On the Named Artists Depicted with a Palette," Journal of Egyptian History, no. 17.2 (2024): pp. 155-202., pp. 170-172; p. 171 (illus.)